Go to this site, this guy has gone through alot.
[url]http://throughthecracks.org/[/url]
Somewhere around maybe 17, I became very interested in LSD, largely due to all the publicity it was getting on TV as a new drug. The TV reports
described how it made people see colors and rainbows and put them into a fantasy world for 8 to 10 hours at a time. "Sounds good to me!!!" I thought,
and I made it my business to get some. I did a lot of reading about it, and did everything by the book... including having at least one friend in the room that
was not using the drug. To those that don't know, LSD is a tremendous mind altering drug. It does indeed cause what I can only describe as all
encompassing hallucinations, in which the mind will convert music into the most amazing patterns of light and color. It also puts you (or at least me) into a
very childlike state, and if you are not mentally stable or the environment is bad, it can turn into a nightmare experience that we referred to as a bad trip, or
"flipping out".
LSD is on a certain level anti-addictive. First of all, if you take it less than 12 days apart, it will lose most of its effect. Second, the experience is so
profound that most people would not want to use it again anytime soon. For me however, it marked the beginning of a lifestyle of progressively frequent
drug use, with LSD and other hallucinogens at the top of my list. As a single parent, my dad was not able to police me as he probably would have
otherwise. It was far too easy for me to have people over the house to trip out and get high anytime. I was also a pretty smart kid, so that unlike many of
my friends, my schoolwork was not being affected at all by these drugs. In fact, I remember scoring a 94 on my Physics regents exam, which I completed
in 1/3 the allotted time, after having used LSD just 2 nights before. But the lines between fantasy and reality were beginning to blur in my life. The effects
of LSD lend themselves quite well to spiritual openness and curiosity. Around that time, a band called the Moody Blues became my favorite group. With
their great blend of Rock and Orchestral music, and lyrics that always hinted at the greater realities of God, Love, and Hope, I was becoming a very
philosophical kid.