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12.04.2002
We were our century's
cowboys; explorers of inner space; the last adventurers. We charted
the only empty terrain left under heaven or on earth. We were
the superstars in a world without borders, and yet to look at
us today, you'd think we were some kind of criminals.
With legalization and
liberalization came a relaxed attitude, and the lifting of the
specter of jail time for drug crimes lightened everyone up. Far
from freeing society, decriminalization mostly just made it lazy;
drugs became just another creature comfort in a world already
full of them. Despite the tsk-tsking of reactionaries who called
us self-indulgent waste cases, we intronauts (it was my old friend
Ginzo who coined the word; a million headlines, books and articles
and he's never seen a dime of it all, which I guess is just as
well since he won't let metal within four hundred feet of him,
because of the beams) were simply seekers. We wanted to used
drugs and other substances that altered the brain chemistry to
become new pioneers, travelers in the world inside. We weren't
the burnt-out junkies those who grew up too late to appreciate
our sacrifice said we were: we were the Lewis and Clarks of the
mind, the Pizaros of the soul.
And, like those great
men and others like them, we faced grave personal peril in our
forever-unappreciated quest for experimentation for experimentation's
sake. Just the five of us paid a price far beyond any imagined
by the ivory-tower punditocracy who scorn us for the knowledge
we brought the world. Ginzo, you know about, particularly if
you were a psychology major in college who concentrated in deviant
behavior. Red was the first of us to take the long, black trip;
he was the most dedicated of all of us, eating anything -- metal,
plastic, solidified and congealed industrial solvents -- as long
as it had been heavily processed with powerful chemical solutions.
The things that man filed down into a powder, mixed with egg
whites and brandy, and drank in the name of science should bring
shame to the safe-as-houses middle-of-the-roaders who pass for
researchers these days. People like to say that the reason no
one visits his grave is because of the high levels of radiation
and toxic groundwater, but I know better. Larry and Neal -- what
a pair they were. Larry smoked things you wouldn't have thought
it possible to smoke, and also did some stuff with househould
astringents that have yet to be surpassed. Where did it get him?
A pauper's grave in Bolivia, or possibly Parguay, depending on
which of those guys who hang out at O'Sullivan's you want to
believe. And Neal, who loved Larry as much as he loved liquefying
things and injecting them into his veins, is the only one besides
me who's alive and not living in a yurt he constructed out of
discarded human tissue; but he's just not the same man he used
to be. His face used to light up when he'd have half a cup of
liquefied steel wool coursing through his bloodstream; now the
only glow he gets is from the cheap motel sign clicking on and
off.
Do I have any regrets?
Hell, no. The things we discovered were too big, too important
to worry about the shabby treatment shown to the men who did
the discovering. From a remarkably complete data set regarding
the passage of iron filings through the human body, to an explicitly
detailed map of northern and southern Happyland during all six
seasons, to a fully functional perpetual motion machine that
can be activated by good thoughts (not that you can find those
anymore), to a corpus of psychiatric literature for which we
have been personally thanked by the American Medical Association,
our accomplishments stand alone, regardless of the sniping of
our detractors. Am I bitter? Not really. I never got into this
for the glory. I was just following in the steps of great men
like Owsley, Leary, and that guy who lived in the green and white
trailer. If I seemed tall, it was because I was standing on the
foreheads of monsters. Pretty profound, huh? I wrote that.
We were pioneers of inner
space, artists in the ultimate medium, the last heroes. And what
do we get for our troubles? Huh?
What was I talking about
again?
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