ความคิดเห็นที่ 10
"The Beat writers and the rock musicians had another thing in common drugs which were an integral part of the changes taking place in literature and music at the time. :-) taking substances to change the minds vision and inspire writing is not new to literature: in the 19th century the Romantic poets used opium for much the same ends" --http://reporter.leeds.ac.uk/481/s5.htm
อย่าง The Beatles นี่ก็เล่นยาเหมือนกันนะคะ
The Beatles - "Help' was made on Pot. 'A Hard Day's Night,' I was on pills. That's drugs, that's bigger drugs than Pot. I've been on pills since I was 15, no, since I was 17 or 19... Since I became a musician... I've always needed a drug to survive...."
อันนี้ก็น่าสนใจเอามาให้อ่านเล่นๆนะคะ
Drugs
For most rock performers, drugs seemed an avenue towards liberation. Most groups started with socially acceptable drugs like alcohol, nicotine and caffeine. Amphetamines offered an escape from fatigue and rigid schedules, and helped young rock groups play several sets a night, party afterwards, and perhaps travel to another town the next day. Marijuana seemed pretty harmless, and offered liberation from goal-oriented accomplishment, and into a new appreciation for the here and now: what better temptation for an artist? From there, though, it was an easy leap to LSD, heroin and other more dangerous and addictive substances. Too many great rock artists lost their lives due to substance abuse. And many others had years of painful recovery in order to kick their self-destructive habits.
The use of drugs as part of the rock culture also contributed to what Ken Wilber has called the "pre/trans fallacy". Many rock artists, upon discovering drugs such as marijuana and LSD, found that use of such substances helped them transcend their normal, rational, states of consciousness and achieve a sort of mystic realization of the unity of all things. And this led some of them to seek other routes to such transrational, integrative states, such as meditation.
Unfortunately, use of other drugs, or overuse of the same drugs, or any drug usage that started at a lower state of consciousness, could simply result in a prerational state of consciousness. Since both states were nonrational, they could easily be confused. But while transrational states transcended and included rational states, prerational consciousness was simply delusional or narcissistic. Unfortunately, the culture of the time mostly lacked the ability to discriminate between these two states, so advocacy for the freedom to use drugs often resulted in lower, rather than higher, states of consciousness. --http://www.reasontorock.com/closing/epilogue.html
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