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LSD Essay Research Paper Fear And Loathing

LSD Essay, Research Paper


Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas


Las Vegas has always been known as the city of sin, and the movie


Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas corroborates this belief. From drug


experimentation to gambling, this movie portrays a surprisingly thoughtful


glance into the mind of addiction and of drug usage. Though various drugs


were used in this movie, psychedelics seemed to be the drugs of choice for


the characters. The focus of this paper is to define the hallucinogens by using


it?s most popular member, LSD. After LSD has been adequately defined, a


comparison of the drug and the portrayal of the drug in this movie will be


addressed.


Before LSD is outlined, here is a brief introduction to the movie in


case you haven?t seen it yet. The movie is set in the early seventies, and the


main character is sent to Las Vegas to write an article on an annual


motorcycle race. Under the advice of his estranged lawyer, both ride out to


Las Vegas in a non-stop LSD and mescaline trip. Not only are these two


drugs abused, but other drugs such as ether, cocaine, marijuana, Thorazine,


and a variety of uppers and downers are also abused. As the main character


experiments with the different drugs, the audience can hear his thoughts as


they ramble from extreme paranoia to thoughtful insights. This aspect of the


movie is important because along with great special effects and distorted


sounds, it is a fairly realistic view into the thoughts and actions of a person


on a psychedelic drug. To better describe these thoughts and actions, here is


an explanation of LSD and it?s effects on the body.


The history of LSD doesn?t go back very far. It?s full name is lysergic


acid diethylamide, and it was synthesized for the first time in 1938 by Albert


Hofmann in Basel, Switzerland, who was looking for a blood stimulant. It


was basically untouched until five years later, when Hofmann accidentally


experienced a small amount during a routine synthesis. It was at this time that


the psychoactive elements were made known. The first article on LSD was


written by Werner Stoll in the Swiss Archives of Neurology in 1947. During


the early 1950?s the CIA became aware of the drug, and organized the


infamous Project MK-Ultra, which led to the suicide of a patient who was


given LSD. Use of LSD rose rapidly until 1967, when it was banned


federally by the U.S. government. On October 27, 1970, the Comprehensive


Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act was passed, which made


hallucinogens a Schedule 1 drug. LSD use tapered off until the nineties,


where a resurgence of the drug is occurring, especially among adolescent use.


Pure LSD is a white, odorless crystalline powder that is soluble in


water. It can be administered to the body in several ways, the most common


being oral ingestion through paper, sugar cubes, gelatin, or by pill. LSD may


also be administered intravenously, intramuscularly, or smoked. After the


drug enters the body, it normally takes between 15 minutes to an hour for the


psychoactive properties to take effect. Once the ?trip? begins, it will continue


for an average of six to eight hours. A typical dosage of LSD is around 150 -


300 micrograms, and the effects of the drug depend on several factors:


the amount taken at one time


the user?s past drug experience


the manner in which the drug is taken


the circumstances in which the drug is taken


These factors are especially important with LSD, because the effects on any


user, or even the same user at a different time, are difficult to predict.


The normal physical reactions to LSD usually include dilated pupils,


lowered body temperature, nausea, goose bumps, profuse perspiration,


muscle weakness and trembling, impaired motor skills and coordination, lose


of appetite, increased blood sugar, and a rapid heart rate. The initial effects


begin with a feeling of euphoria and dizziness, followed by


pseudo-hallucinations. Pseudo-hallucinations are hallucinations that the user


is aware of but knows isn?t real. In the hallucinatory state, distortions of time


and distance occur, accompanied by a distorted perception of the size and


shape of objects, movements, color, sound, touch, and the user’s own body


image. The body?s senses become fused together, explaining why users are


able to see music and hear colors. Usually feelings of a mystical or cosmic


nature fill the person taking LSD, and reflections on the self and the world


around are common.


Adverse effects of LSD are feelings of paranoia, fear, anxiety, and


depression. These reactions are indications of a ?bad trip?. In these ?bad


trips?, the pseudo-hallucinations give way to terrifyingly true hallucinations


that the user can?t control or stop. These hallucinations sometimes result in


violence, homicide, or suicide. There are no reported deaths of exclusive


LSD overdose, but cases of suicides that occurred while the individual was


intoxicated with LSD have taken place. Tests on chromosomal damage that


may be linked to LSD are still being studied, but there is no significant proof


to support this hypothesis. The most common adverse effect of LSD are the


flashbacks that may occur after prolonged LSD usage. The flashbacks


experienced are often visual images ranging from formless colors to


frightening hallucinations. The cause of these flashbacks are still unknown,


but researchers do know that these usually occur after an LSD user smokes


cannabis.


Tolerance to LSD?s hallucinatory and physical effects develop rapidly,


making larger amounts of the drug necessary to produce the same effects. If


the drug is taken consecutively over a period of days, no amount of LSD will


cause any significant change in the mood of the user. Also, if the drug is


discontinued for a period of days, the hallucinatory and physical properties


occur again, even in small doses. There is no physical dependence to LSD,


but a few users develop a psychological dependence to the drug.


The production of LSD has been done illegally since the 1960?s. A


limited number of chemists, the DEA thinks less than a dozen, are believed


to be manufacturing nearly all of the LSD available in the United States.


These chemists, or ?cooks? as they are referred to, are located somewhere in


Northern California in or near San Francisco. LSD commonly is produced


from lysergic acid, which is made from ergotamine tartrate, a substance


derived from an ergot fungus on rye, or from lysergic acid amide, a chemical


found in morning glory seeds. Lysergic acid and lysergic acid amide are both


classified in Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act. Only a small


amount of ergotamine tartrate is required to produce LSD in large batches, so


this makes it even harder for law agencies to stop the process. The ?cooking?


of LSD is very time consuming, taking from 2 to 3 days to produce 1 to 4


ounces of the crystalline powder. Impurities are often found in the finished


product, especially those cooked up by independent people who are selling to


their limited location. These impurities don?t change the effects of the LSD,


but it will usually lower the potency of it.


Scientists are still uncertain of the mechanism of action of LSD and


other psychedelics, but the following is a popular belief held by scientists that


is found in Biological Mechanisms by S.J. Watson. ?LSD acts to


preferentially inhibit serotonergic cell firing and seems to spare postsynaptic


serotnergic receptors. This preference is shared by other similar hallucinogens


but in a limited fashion. Nonhallucinogenic analogs of LSD show no


preference. These results suggest that there are two different steric


conformation of serotonergic receptors, one of which has higher affinity for


LSD than the other. In general, 5-ht is an inhibitory transmitter; thus, when


its activity is decreased, the next neuron in the chain is freed from inhibition


and becomes more active. Since serotnergic systems appear to be intimately


involved in the control of sensation, sleep, attention, and mood, it may be


possible to explain the actions of LSD and other hallucinogens by their


disinhibition of these critical systems.?


Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas was an extremely realistic view of the


mind on acid. Of the few films that I?ve seen in relation to LSD, all of them


treated the drug as if it was all fun and games. What I really liked about this


movie was that it didn?t dwell on kaleidoscope shapes and colors to portray


LSD usage, but instead focused in on the mental struggles that the user


undergoes during the experience. Several bizarre behaviors occur in the


movie, but they weren?t primarily used as jokes. Instead it was more of an


intense feeling about the understanding of the drug. As I stated earlier, the


thoughts of the main character while he was on the drugs was made present


to the audience, so as he would describe the drug, the audience could see


what he sees, hear what he was hearing with the distorted soundtrack, and


then feel what he was thinking as he would explain his emotions. All together


it made for a very believable trip, and for those who have taken acid before, a


reflection, or flashback if you will, of their unusual thoughts and reactions


while on the drug.


On the effects of LSD, all were shown in this movie. The main


character experienced several hallucinations throughout the movie. One was


when he thought bats were attacking his convertible, another being when the


hotel check-in clerk?s face became extremely distorted, and looked similar to


a lizard. He was also often seen shaking and full of perspiration. The main


character experienced the artistic insights, and he would document them in


his writings. Not only did the movie show the normal side of LSD, it also


showed the adverse side as well. There were many scenes where the two men


thought the cops were coming for them and experienced extreme paranoia


about this all through the movie. One of the characters also had a terribly


?bad trip?, as he threatened to kill his friend, himself, and a waitress they met


in a bar.


This movie has made a great impact for me on the comprehension of


LSD and other psychedelics. My perspective on LSD changed drastically. I


once viewed this drug as a way to embark on a spiritual journey. That?s all I


knew about the drug and all I really wanted to know. After watching the


movie, I saw the huge contrast in my thinking compared to the portrayal of


the drug in the movie. As I was doing the research on LSD, I found out about


the negative consequences that may occur after ingestion. Even though it


isn?t an addictive drug, reading the case studies and journals of what people


can do while on this drug put a little fear in me. To end on the note, you


won?t see me swatting at bats with a fly-swatter anytime soon.


References:


Addiction Research Foundation (1991). Facts About LSD. [Online]


Available:


www.arf.org/isd/pim/facts1.html


Cohen, S. (1960). Lysergic Acid Diethylamide: Side Effects and


Complications.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 130: 30-40


Drug Free Resource Net (1999). LSD [Online] Available:


http://www.drugfreeamerica.org/lsd.html


Gilliam, T. (Director). (1980). Gilliam [Film]. Universal.


Hofmann, A. (1983). LSD — My Problem Child. Los Angeles: J.P.


Tarcher


Inaba, Darryl S., Cohen, William E. & Holstein, Michael E. (1997).


Uppers, Downers, All-Arounders. (3rd ed.). Oregon: CNS Publications INC.


Keeler, Martin H. & Reifler, Clifford B. (1967. January 7). Suicide


During an LSD Reaction. American Journal of Psychiatry. 123: 884-885.


Loughman, W.D., Sargent, T.W. & Isrealstam, D.M. (1967, October


27) Leukocytes of Humans Exposed to Lysergic Acid Diethylamide: Lack of


Chromosomal Damage. Science. 158:508-510


U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. (1997). Drugs Of Abuse -


LSD. [Online]


http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/pubs/abuse/chap5/lsd.htm


Wesson, D.R. & Smith, D.E. (1976). An Analysis of Psychedelic


Flashbacks. American Journal Of Drug And Alcohol Abuse. 3: 425-435

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