My response to him was to ask him three questions. One: Was he familiar with the psychedelic experience? "Yes," he said. Two: Would he trust me as a
guide in such an experience? He looked at me strangely for a moment, and then said, "Yes, of course." Three: Would you come down the hall with me to
the chemistry lab and trust me if I would try a quick experiment? "Sure," he said. So we went down to the lab where there was a giant dry-ice
container, and I opened it up, and asked him to put his head inside this container and to breath twice, deeply, through his mouth. He did this, and I
caught him as he stumbled backwards. "Wow," he said. "That was a totally unexpected turn-on." "Did it remind you of LSD?" "Yes," he said. "Initially I
went out there quite far, but you were there and I had no problem re-centering myself."
We returned to the office. I asked him, "Do you think you could separate the mechanisms of action of LSD on you, as distinct from the actions of
carbon dioxide?" He told me quite honestly, "No, they sure came on in the same way." So, I asked him, could you possibly design a research project
that would result in an explanation of the difference of the action of LSD and of carbon dioxide? He shook his head. He admitted that it might be very
difficult to explain the action of LSD (which has some 49 atoms in its structure) if he couldn't explain the action of carbon dioxide, which contains
only 3 atoms. |