World Psychedelic Forum
By Luc Sala of
Dear Friends,
The tribe has met again, the tribe of those who know that our normal
view of reality isn’t all there is, and that there are ways and means to get in
touch with the otherworlds without and within. As I
have done before I will give my personal and sometimes critical comments here,
based on what I experienced and the obviously limited number of sessions I
attended. Please understand this is not meant to be an attack on the
organisation, I think they did a great job and with 1500 participants they can
be proud of establishing the WPF as a real global and important forum. But
leaving it at that, they and we would not really learn anything to improve the
WPF, stimulate the wider psychedelic community or those involved in similar
events.
It was, for me and I believe for many, another meeting of great minds
and of hearts, this Psychedelic World Forum. Ambitious name, as a moniker more
future-proof than the LSD conference two years ago, but then that was Albert’s
event. He wasn’t there, in
The conference, organisationally, was Swiss and “gründlich”,
a bit stiff and efficient, clear, but I admit I kept my badgeholder,
it’s probably very ecological and penny-wise to ask those back, but what about a
little memento? Dieter looked tired, Lucius a bit
stressed, but they did a good job. May they take what follows as positive feedback. I like the setup with panorama sessions, this
allows an overview of what the various speakers are going to present, it’s an efficient way to help attendees to pick and choose from
among the parallel sessions.
More research
One of the positive developments in the psychedelic world is that there
is, here and there, a little bit more room for research, a little bit more
academic freedom. It’s too early to talk about a revival of academic
respectability, but the signs are positive with projects underway in
There are now too many anecdotal and personal stories, documentaries,
books, usually about how someone worked through “Western” trauma and blockages
with the help of “non-western” sacred plants and rituals. Of course there are
people like Stan Grof, who have charted and expanded
our Western mind map; his work around the birth matrix and holotropic
breath-work I missed at the LSD-conference two years ago, is an essential piece
of the puzzle.
Copyrights
One of the undercurrents at this conference was the issue of copyrights,
and I think that is important. Too many camera-teams, too many videos with
unacknowledged material, too many claims and limited understanding of what the
law (the Berner Convention) requires. In short, and
apart from personality, musical, portrait and other rights, the copyright of events
like this belongs to the producers, the organisers - here the Gaia Foundation.
For news purposes one can use limited clips, quotes etc. for 29 days (the
concept of free news gathering) but then the rights of all events go back to
the producer. They might give that away, making it public domain, or sell it,
farm it out any way they want, etc. If the speakers or presenters have made
prior arrangements about the rights with the producer, the whole thing gets
even more complicated. People registering the event, as far as the programmed
speeches etc. go, have in fact no rights at all (after that 29 days, but how
many real press people were there?). Now this is not new, so all those people
claiming copyrights because it was their camera, their crew that recorded this
or that conference or event in the past, they actually have NO or very limited artistic
rights. And to sharpen the point, videoing or recording a ritual in an obscure
jungle location is therefore illegal, if no deal is made with those who produce
the ritual or event. Bad news for all those camera
crews out there, but something that obviously also isn’t recognized by all
those folks with cameras in the audience at events like these.
It’s another thing to do private interviews with the speakers, and there
were quite a few crews around doing that. Some of them made my toes curl because of the
shots they made, out-of-focus, backlit, with strange
angles and framing, I hope they all will become great cineasts
one day or have editing talents and tools beyond my dreams. Most were not
press, but making more or less commercial documentaries, in fact using the
presence of all those speakers, the public etc. in a commercial production. The
organisation allowed that and I admit, I did film too.
But then I handed out more than 250 DVD’s of my “Homage to Albert” video for
free. It was something I made two years ago as a present for our hero, and I
made sure that all those who were in that video received a copy too.
It made me wonder, how many more video/documentaries can we stomach
about the psychedelic (r)evolution, all with
interviews with Grof, Grey,
Which brings me to what I think the real purpose of
the WPF is and that is to elevate psychedelics beyond the cult level, make it
respectable. Now they tried, but at the same time accommodating the scientists (who
do need a respectable platform, I agree), the alternative (freak/cult/culture/tribe)
and all those who have a vested (often financial) interest in the whole circus
is not an easy thing. Maybe the span of the WPF is a bit too wide, maybe more
focus and a smaller scale would work better. But I can also understand the
reply: what about the money, the media attention, the scale?
New wave
There were many younger attendees and that is great, we need the new
generation. Usually they were experienced trippers, I had great conversations
with them, some had very good insight in recognising whom
of the speakers was “real” and who not. Encouraging, and one could feel that a
new wave might be at hand. I was
particularly touched by Rick Doblin kind of vocalising a Boom Festival presence
in the hotel lobby with an young crowd around him. But
there was much more, mothers talking about their young kids tasting (by
accident but obviously some kids get attracted to the substances) LSD or
mushrooms. I had fun talking to the young kids, hearing their stories, how they
dealt with the legality, the dangers, etc.
I hope the new generation will use all this wisely, the warnings by some
shamans about inappropriate use of Ayahuasca were
clear, the use of recorded songs is inappropriate because those songs are
unique, channelled, time-bound. I totally agree with
that warning, many of the self appointed and often self-initiated “western
shamans” are dangerously unaware of what is at stake, the spirit world has its
dangers and I see that recreational use of cannabis etc. does carry risks.
I actually doubt if western shamans can safely guide such rituals at all,
my experience with many many
sessions at the Myster center
in
It sounds great if Kat Harrison tells the attendees we are, because we
were there, all healers, that we can access the band of magic over our head,
that we can touch the unseen, but what does that mean? Too many believe that
after a few sessions or rituals they can do it themselves, that their glimpse
of the other realities made them gurus or at least holy, and they set up a
little business. But how does one measure up against the really initiated?
There was a demonstration of how modern brain scan techniques can differentiate
between mind states, how about a quality-test for aspiring shamans? We know
that the legislators are looking for the accidents, the crisis situations, the
suicides as an excuse to limit psychedelic use and research, as is now
happening in the
The mix
I thought it was great to see that there actually was a nun attending
the conference (and a few less recognizable pastors etc.), seeing her talk with
the shamans, the hindu folks
in orange, the hippie kids. We need to honour that tradition too, monasteries,
mass, the sacraments, they are the western way of dealing with the unseen. Of course
there was inquisition, holy wars, etc, but do we really think that those
Amazonian Indians lived only the holy life? Holy Mass is celebrating a mystery,
and even if Jesus wasn’t using Ergot, consecration does mean charging material
stuff with unmaterial energy. Priests are shamans,
just by another name, and usually well trained. Should freemasons, exorcists, rosicrusians and the craft and druids be part of a forum
about entering the otherworld?
The speakers
What makes you eligible to get a gig at the WPF? It looks like writing a
popular book, making a documentary, having been there “always” or being “in”
with the crowd is important, but most of the recent books contain little new
insight, they are professionally crafted and often very commercial productions,
rehashing what is already known; in other words, we have a lot of me-too
stuff. Yes, Benny Shanon
in recent years did some good work with his Ayahuasca
study and Narby’s snake/LSD connection is
interesting, but is speculating that Mozes, Jesus, or
whomever was psychedelically inspired really more than ego-promoting hype? Ok,
let’s throw in some
What was missing, although I appreciate the attempts to bring it into
the program, was the magic. It is of course important to see what those
substances do, what they meant for individual artists, writers, researchers,
but how have they influenced our reality? The mystical is ok, that LSD opened
inner worlds granted, but can we use this “technology” to solve real problems?
Who talks about how Ayahuasca was used in warfare, kept the white
invaders away, about the real dark use of substances? Narby
does interesting work, trying
to help find cures for tuberculosis, but there could be much
more. What about climate change, what about deep physics, what about cancer,
radiation or dealing with internet-addiction. And sex,
too obvious absent at this WPF, like humour,
psychedelic can be very funny. I appreciated the fact that “natural” or
non-induced altered states were taken seriously in many sessions, and that many
spoke of the inner child being an altered state, maybe even the original state.
Manuel Schoch quoted the Bible there; “If we do not
become like children, we will not enter the kingdom of heaven”.
Art is great, pychedelic art is better, psychedelic
music a great inspiration, but I am very happy to see the Grey’s going beyond
the 2 dimensional (paintings) into threedimensional (their
Chapel and the new place upstate) and fourdimensional
work; Alex referred to Jospeh Beuys “social
sculpture” ideas. They take the inspiration into the world, actively and in
ever wider circles, making the psychedelic experience real, in meeting,
connecting and changing our world. We are in a crisis, financially,
emotionally, ethically; trying to prove (again) that this or that substance is
an effective way to kick this or that habit is old hat, scientifically
interesting but not enough. We need new ways of dealing with what’s out there,
with climate change, terror, fascism, big brother. Get out there, like in the
sixties and make waves, shake them up, go for the magic, even if it makes no
sense. Mountain Girl Garcia, one of Kesey’s Merry Pranksters, was one of the most
enthousiastic speakers at the Forum, bringing fresh
energy, vigor, life to it. And Manuel Schoch was another great and energetic speaker.
I was lucky (or was it synchronicity?) to meet a Heilpraktiker,
with little or no experience with the subject, who told me she tried to charge
water with LSD information in her hotel. For her that was quite logical, she
uses charged water a lot in her healing work. The charging of water (there is
even a scale for it called Bovis) is similar to
homeopathy, but without dilution, no material exchange happens. Now this is
what I have been doing for some time, and it works, but nobody at the WPF
believes such “magic”. Stan Grof comes closest as he
indicated it might be strong hypnotic induction or placebo effect. But if it
works, who cares?
Suggestions
Now criticising
the choice of speakers etc. is easy, but may I make some
suggestions? Get more eloquent and authorative
speakers to keynote. Stan Grof is a lovable man with
deep insight, Metzner a sensitive and engaging hero,
but I miss the (sometimes demagogic) rants of Leary, of Terence? What about
people like John Perry Barlow, Biosphere2 John Allen or Brother David Steindl-Rast? Outsiders, in a way, but they would broaden
the scope and they have been around the block too! In fact, there were many
people at the conference I would have loved to see on stage, John Gilmore of
the EFF among them, and young Finn McKenna, so much his father, let’s encourage
him to finish some of Terence’s projects.
When I am honest, I have been to too many of these conferences already,
I know the people, I know their “rap”, it’s old hat. So in some lectures I
followed I nearly fell asleep, going there because the speakers were famous or
my friends, but I have heard it before, the stories, the discourses, I know
them. For me it’s meeting old friends, the tribal energy, the openness, the one-on-one contacts, talking about yesteryear and how
great it was, the new friends I made.
But obviously there were, beside the insiders, also newcomers,
youngsters, people who have not had this opportunity. So there was a kind of a
split, a dichotomy. If this were called the
I myself was looking for the inspired, the initiated, the
holy and of course there were those inspiring young researchers, writers, psychedelicious spirits of all ages, but why not have a
comedian, a live musician, for my part a slight of hand magician with a
psychedelic inclination like Jeff McBride make us “feel” what is at stake. The
“sacred” moment when the attendees energy was asked to support Albert at the
closing ceremony was the highpoint of the WPF for many, is this
a lesson?
One last remark, I was glad that the people in prison because of the war
on drugs were mentioned in connection with John Beresford, their champion, and
that this issue of illegality therefore was part of this event.
Luc Sala,
You can
find my report about the 2006 LSD conference at www.net.info.nl/hofmann.htm and
my pre-event email at www.net.info.nl/wpfpre.htm