Syd Barrett | Are Psychedelics Dangerous? Do They Cause Schizophrenia?

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  • Опубліковано 25 лют 2021
  • This video answers the questions: Can I analyze the life and death of Syd Barrett? Barrett was a co-founder of the band Pink Floyd.
    Support Dr. Grande on Patreon: / drgrande
    American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Arlington, VA: Author.
    www.schizophrenia.com/sznews/a...
    www.mhfestival.com/news/talki...
    schizophrenia.com/stories/sbar...
    www.rollingstone.com/feature/...
    www.pastemagazine.com/science...
    www.biography.com/news/syd-ba...
    González-Maeso, J., & Sealfon, S. C. (2009). Psychedelics and schizophrenia. Trends in Neurosciences, 32(4), 225-232. doi:10.1016/j.tins.2008.12.005
    journals.plos.org/plosone/art...
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    I'm looking forward to putting more of my content into audio and developing new, original podcasts on mental health topics. Visit us online, and feel free to reach out with your questions or ideas by going to arslonga.media.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,7 тис.

  • @JoJoJoker
    @JoJoJoker 3 роки тому +908

    Psychedelics + Underlying Issues = Issues Surface

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss 3 роки тому +82

      Yeah. Even people who do not fear monger around LSD mostly agree that it is more harmful than good for schizophrenics, especially in excess.

    • @williamh5780
      @williamh5780 3 роки тому +89

      Psychedelics can also be helpful for facing your issues.

    • @bluemamba5317
      @bluemamba5317 3 роки тому +70

      @@williamh5780 Depends on the issues

    • @williamh5780
      @williamh5780 3 роки тому +32

      @@bluemamba5317 depends on the issue for sure.

    • @williamh5780
      @williamh5780 3 роки тому +41

      @@bluemamba5317 and it's probably not good to do hundreds of doses . . Lol.

  • @philipgior3312
    @philipgior3312 3 роки тому +656

    When Pink Floyd would put out compilation/greatest hits albums, David Gilmour - who basically replaced Barrett in the band - would make sure there was at least 1 Barrett composition on the album so that he would be guaranteed some royalties. Many Pink Floyd songs reference Barrett with 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond' being a direct tribute to him. Excellent analysis Dr Grande. I appreciate this one a great deal!

    • @MrDpbazan1955
      @MrDpbazan1955 3 роки тому +4

      Never knew of him til now

    • @ambulocetusnatans
      @ambulocetusnatans 3 роки тому +14

      I didn't know that about Gilmour, but the lyrics of some of Barrett's solo material seem to show that he was bitter about not being in the band anymore. I'm thinking specifically of the song "Rats".

    • @philipgior3312
      @philipgior3312 3 роки тому +21

      @@ambulocetusnatans The lyrics on 'Jugland Blues', Barrett's one composition on the 'Saucerful of Secrets' album, can also be interpreted as containing a bitterness of feeling more and more left out of the band.

    • @StormyDay
      @StormyDay 3 роки тому +30

      They felt incredibly guilty because Syd had been the heart and soul of the band. They never stopped talking about him nor writing and including songs about him on their albums.

    • @jamescindric5056
      @jamescindric5056 3 роки тому +18

      @@philipgior3312 He was actually in the band at that point. They had to drag him to even get him to come. That is what happened the day he wrote that piece. He was too unreliable for live shows and wouldn't show up, they had to get someone to turn around and pretend to be him a couple of times. He was clearly jaded by the music industry, but being left out of the band is not what caused his actions and the bitterness, he was left out of the band because of his actions and bitterness. Without Gilmour it is unlikely he would have any solo material either.

  • @honeyduchess
    @honeyduchess 3 роки тому +394

    I was just watching Jimmy Fallon interview Roger Waters. Jimmy was incredibly insensitive about Syd’s mental decline and laughed about how he “did too many drugs and lost it”. You could see Roger’s pain at this shallow description of his friend’s suffering.

    • @deemariedubois4916
      @deemariedubois4916 3 роки тому +116

      Jimmy Fallon is shallow and pretty much a moron, IMO.

    • @jayneneewing2369
      @jayneneewing2369 3 роки тому +40

      Fallon totally lost me when he asked to run his fingers through tRump’s hair, and then actually did it. His statement was: “It’s really soft.” I assume Fallon is just basically clueless, because your story about him fits right in with my view, imho. Thanks for the validation.

    • @deemariedubois4916
      @deemariedubois4916 3 роки тому +22

      @@jayneneewing2369 I saw the YT video of that creepy incident. I thought WTF is this man doing?

    • @janicepowell109
      @janicepowell109 3 роки тому +12

      Jimmy Fallon is very far removed from Barrett. The last burst of psychedelic use was 1988-1993 and the results are likely found in the 40-50 age group

    • @DDios-ih9de
      @DDios-ih9de 3 роки тому +27

      Fallon is a huge Jack off

  • @JustinBrown-jz2of
    @JustinBrown-jz2of 2 місяці тому +148

    I have been depressed for a long time, but after taking shrooms few months ago, l feel much happier and highly motivated and my ADHD gone , lost a ton of anxiousness and had a few epiphanies about how I should live my life. I decided to buy an ounce for backup, but haven’t yet felt the need to take any more since then.

    • @barbaraingram1045
      @barbaraingram1045 2 місяці тому +1

      I have autism, I was diagnosed with it when I was 15. I tried shrooms and it made me function so much better.

    • @antoniojames5766
      @antoniojames5766 2 місяці тому +1

      Eek I’m autistic too and might wanna try mushrooms. How do I go about it?

    • @barbaraingram1045
      @barbaraingram1045 2 місяці тому

      Yeah doc.brenttt is your guide. Man is exceptional with anything psychedelics.

    • @jimwoodman8101
      @jimwoodman8101 Місяць тому

      On instgrm??

    • @barbaraingram1045
      @barbaraingram1045 Місяць тому

      Yes doc.Brenttt

  • @emanuelaemanuela
    @emanuelaemanuela 3 роки тому +161

    „His mother encouraged him“ - that is so sweet. She couldn’t take his pain away, but he could make music for his time being.

    • @MrDpbazan1955
      @MrDpbazan1955 3 роки тому +11

      Good mommy

    • @teresahowick5197
      @teresahowick5197 3 роки тому +13

      This made me tear up.

    • @suzbone
      @suzbone 3 роки тому +9

      I said "awwww" out loud at that part, yeah

    • @balloonhead61
      @balloonhead61 3 роки тому +7

      Syd is a genius
      His solo album 'the madcap laughs' is incredible

    • @SoftTangerineDreams
      @SoftTangerineDreams 3 роки тому +5

      @@balloonhead61 I have it on vinyl, it's fantastic. Octopus is my favorite.

  • @sspbrazil
    @sspbrazil 3 роки тому +481

    I’ve never seen anyone try to assess Syd publicly, good job Dr. Grande.

    • @mightymorphinetime
      @mightymorphinetime 3 роки тому +37

      this was a nice suprise. syd is someone that usually goes unnoticied but his arts and talents are pretty remarkable.

    • @MicahMicahel
      @MicahMicahel 3 роки тому +9

      superfans say he was taking other hard drugs.

    • @JustDr.S
      @JustDr.S 3 роки тому +5

      It's definitely a familiar story.

    • @taminapiwocki3423
      @taminapiwocki3423 3 роки тому

      Hear hear!

    • @sspbrazil
      @sspbrazil 3 роки тому +1

      @First name Last name of course he is, he has his PH.D, which means he can be called Dr.

  • @jamesdunn9609
    @jamesdunn9609 3 роки тому +97

    What I find interesting is that Syd was never formally diagnosed with mental illness. But he was clearly changed after he started using large amounts of LSD. After watching every single interview I could find with the people that knew him best, the thing that sticks with me the most is a comment that more than one of them made about him. Nearly every single person said that prior to his LSD use Syd "had a sparkle in his eyes that was captivating." They also almost uniformly said that afterward "the light had gone out in his eyes." This is heartbreaking to me. Whatever happened, Syd would never be the same. In the end, I believe this story is about psychological resilience and the effect heavy doses of LSD may have on someone who is not particularly resilient to stress. LSD disorganizes cognitive processes. If the person's neural pathways aren't well established, returning to organization may be difficult, if not impossible. Now I can't say for certain if this is what happened to Syd, but it sure looks like it to me. What I do know he was a beautiful and unique soul, and we are all diminished by his loss.

    • @kingofthedead333
      @kingofthedead333 2 роки тому +9

      good comment.

    • @rsears78
      @rsears78 2 роки тому +12

      Same thing with Peter Green of Fleetwood Mac, too much acid

    • @ramy9822
      @ramy9822 Рік тому +10

      I feel I suffer from the same life hasn’t been the same since i took large doses of acid & shrooms. It sucks cause it feels like I won’t ever be the same person I was.

    • @matthoward8546
      @matthoward8546 Рік тому +9

      " there's a look in your eye like black holes in the sky". Pink Floyd

    • @chillhomie04
      @chillhomie04 Рік тому +5

      @@ramy9822
      You will be that same person that you were. It starts with you. You got this!

  • @LordStompyHarpLoonyTunes
    @LordStompyHarpLoonyTunes 3 роки тому +177

    I've seen the descent into drug fueled schizophrenia happen first hand to a charismatic quirky teenager. I could tell something was very wrong for a few months, she was steadily losing contact with reality and I was trying to advise her to refrain from partying with her druggie friends, everyone was treating me like I was some party pooper bad guy. Then bang, she suddenly plunged into full schizoid psychosis. People think pot smoking is "harmless", I used to be a massive pot head, but over the years I've seen it help precipitate mental illness in a number of people

    • @ayalove6285
      @ayalove6285 Рік тому +19

      Charasmatic and quirky are acts people tend to put on. Sad people don't like to accept their own misery so they refuse to see it in others.

    • @aarondavis8943
      @aarondavis8943 Рік тому +10

      We need some definitive research on weed and it's affect on mental health and health generally which is in the pipeline (so to speak) because it's finally being decriminalized. Both pot smoking and acid may precipitate schizophrenia simply by the onrush of fear it can produce in some people. It may trigger something that was on it's way eventually anyway, like a bursting dam.
      I would say it's probable that Syd would have developed mental issues regardless of drug use, though of course it certainly wouldn't help.

    • @Mecanotech
      @Mecanotech Рік тому +30

      I agree. I used weed for many many years and kept using even tho my anxiety and paranoia was getting worst and worst. I would be more inclined to use because of all the people talking good and praising it on the internet, artist, etc, I would proudly use it. But it's dangerous to mental health and it should be recognized at that.
      LSD i recognized the danger almost immediately. During my first uses of the drug I can attest at how impressionable my mind was during the high. You can get traumatized if you get scared or have bad experiences during the high. The feelings, the strong feelings stay with you, later when sober.
      I describe it as, it opens up your brain, like it exposes it, it is dangerous.
      I wish this dangers are more recognized and accept it so people can see the truth. But instead more I see people calling it as good as a miracle plant that should be called medicine. It can be good bad it also can be bad.

    • @rubenbustamante1828
      @rubenbustamante1828 Рік тому +21

      Last year My son did synthetic weed and Acid and read a book of witch craft .Well long story short my son ended up in a Pschyc ward for almost a month. The Diagnosed him schizophrenic but I'm 100% convinced it was something else.

    • @BrandonConnolly_
      @BrandonConnolly_ Рік тому +5

      Interesting. Was it just marijuana they were using? Were benzodiazepines or psychedelic used?

  • @gojiberry7201
    @gojiberry7201 3 роки тому +546

    My brother was bipolar & ADHD; he displayed unusual behavior since he was tiny. He started drinking as a pre-teen. This was before people knew much about mental illness, and he eventually died due to alcohol. I totally believe that people who are troubled will try to self-medicate thru addictions. I hope that we can find more ways to help people with mental illness.

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss 3 роки тому +36

      Alcohol is really insidious. Sorry you lost your brother to its talons. The addictive aspect of alcohol sneaks into people. Why is alcohol so ubiquitous in tv shows & movies?

    • @gazXspace
      @gazXspace 3 роки тому +4

      I 100% agree with you there .........

    • @TheAtl198
      @TheAtl198 3 роки тому +11

      @@kristinabliss Because it's legal.

    • @code-52
      @code-52 3 роки тому +3

      I'm sorry. Yes, we must do better.

    • @CallsignJoNay
      @CallsignJoNay 3 роки тому +3

      @@kristinabliss Your takeaway from this tragic story is that alcohol is bad?

  • @TeoBlu
    @TeoBlu 3 роки тому +496

    "People on psychedelics may believe they are capable of flight. That misconception is usually clarified upon making contact with the ground" - George Carlin would be so proud of you, Doctor.

    • @kham1163
      @kham1163 3 роки тому +9

      Speaking of, it’s time for a little Carlin analysis. I won’t answer all the OCEAN questions, but old George was highly disagreeable!

    • @ianrs4685
      @ianrs4685 3 роки тому +19

      bullshit
      sorry

    • @tupsugirl
      @tupsugirl 3 роки тому +17

      ian rs agreed. Should not perpetuate the misconception. No way do you think you can fly

    • @shhmypupissleepin3015
      @shhmypupissleepin3015 3 роки тому +4

      @@ianrs4685 I think it’s a metaphor

    • @grunkert
      @grunkert 3 роки тому +13

      If they thought they could fly, they should've taken off on the ground first

  • @Real_McPhee
    @Real_McPhee 3 роки тому +40

    As a massive Pink Floyd fan and a substance use counselor Syd’s story is so intriguing. Not only did the band not want to fire him, they simply stopped picking him from his home on the way to the studio. In my current role, the chicken and egg question is constant. Which of the coexisting conditions is diving the other. It’s one of the most interesting aspect of trying to help our clients. What Sys should be remembered for above all else is being the spark that gave the world one of the best bands ever. May you forever shine, crazy diamond.

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Рік тому +2

      Take your trilafon and call me in the morning; you'll be alright. Just STAY CLEAN. My best friend relapsed on heroin after 22 years of sobriety. He's still using now.

  • @jenniferclick1238
    @jenniferclick1238 3 роки тому +40

    Syd's lyrics are genius. His illness haunted the band. I've seen numerous interviews with band members and the pain of watching their friend slowly disappear was evident.

  • @DEPARTMENTOFREDUNDANCYDEPT
    @DEPARTMENTOFREDUNDANCYDEPT 3 роки тому +169

    The band's name is derived from the given names of two blues musicians whose Piedmont blues records Barrett had in his collection, Pink Anderson and Floyd Council. Most of the British bands of the 60's were heavily influenced by American Black blues music which struggled to gain a wider audience in the United States. Pink Floyd band members were also deeply affected by the decline and loss of Barrett, and much of their creative work after his departure explores the topic of mental illness. An entire album, "Wish You Were Here" was basically dedicated to Barrett and his struggles.

    • @MrDpbazan1955
      @MrDpbazan1955 3 роки тому +1

      Sorta like Elton john

    • @icturner23
      @icturner23 3 роки тому +1

      Two blues musicians from the same label are wide influences?

    • @susan7090
      @susan7090 3 роки тому +5

      @@icturner23 citing a love and nod to incorporating the suggestive blues melodramatics and mixing that with a yawning psychedelic sounding story was a wonderful result we are blessed to know as PINK FLOYD. So yes, a wide union. You either share the hypocrisy of what works for no other band than PINK, or you just don’t get it. Put on another
      A typical Zepplin record IC Turner and airplay STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN. Be part of the Normal crowd - CARRY ON.

    • @DEPARTMENTOFREDUNDANCYDEPT
      @DEPARTMENTOFREDUNDANCYDEPT 3 роки тому +14

      @@icturner23 It's two examples from his record collection, not the ONLY examples, and it's two artists virtually UNKNOWN, even in the states, so YES, I'd say it's indicative of a person whose musical tastes are quite broad. The fact that he even KNEW about them is an indication of a deep exploration of available music at that time. Is that good enough for you? Most people would be able to extrapolate the meaning of my comment and would not have required a detailed explanation.

    • @maribrunnsteiner9621
      @maribrunnsteiner9621 3 роки тому +2

      @@MrDpbazan1955 "why can't u name yourself as John Elton"? ask rowan Mr.Bean

  • @clemintide
    @clemintide 3 роки тому +181

    “Today a young man on acid realized that all matter is merely energy condensed to a slow vibration, that we are all one consciousness experiencing itself subjectively, there is no such thing as death, life is only a dream, and we are the imagination of ourselves. Here's Tom with the weather.”

  • @jsyvret472
    @jsyvret472 3 роки тому +124

    From my own experiance I've found that weed for me is actually one of the most dangerous drugs. Really pushed me to the point where I was on the edge of psychosis. Giving up weed was the best thing I ever did. I also know people who have lost their minds from acid. Basically be responsible with drugs. They can be great but they can also be f*cking awful!

    • @thatpoeticthug
      @thatpoeticthug 2 роки тому +14

      That's how I'm feeling 2 weeks after I dropped acid and since then I've been having panic attacks when I smoke weed.
      Haven't smoked in 3 days but I wish I can go back to being my old self and just chilling and this can just be an experience that I can pass through

    • @jsyvret472
      @jsyvret472 2 роки тому +12

      @@thatpoeticthug give it time and stay off the weed. I had a similar experience and had panic attacks for a month or so after but has stopped now. Just not ever gonna do trips or smoke weed again. Good luck brother

    • @thatpoeticthug
      @thatpoeticthug 2 роки тому +2

      @@jsyvret472 thank you man. I ended going to see a doctor. And they prescribed me anti psychotics and anxiety medication.
      I've taken the anxiety medication and migraines but I don't want to take the psychotic one.
      I don't feel like I'm going crazy just feel like my mind is taking too much information and my brains can explode that's why I panic.
      But I'll give it time and I'll try to smoke again probably in a month.

    • @mjh5437
      @mjh5437 2 роки тому +11

      @@thatpoeticthug Don`t risk it.

    • @elizabeth2621
      @elizabeth2621 Рік тому +8

      It’s fun till it isnt

  • @leaflee2066
    @leaflee2066 3 роки тому +118

    I know a mouse, and he hasn't got a house
    I don't know why I call him Gerald he's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse. Shine on Syd.

    • @MidnightIsolde
      @MidnightIsolde 3 роки тому +12

      I''ve got a clan of gingerbread men.
      Here a man, there a man, lots of gingerbread men.
      Take a couple if you wish. They're on the dish.

    • @isabela-wg3pq
      @isabela-wg3pq 3 роки тому +9

      @@MidnightIsolde you’re the kind of girl that fits in with my world, I’ll give you everything anything if you want thingsss

    • @jorgepeterbarton
      @jorgepeterbarton 3 роки тому +7

      I know a room full of musical tunes.
      Some rhyme, some ching, most of them are clockwork.
      Let's go into the other room and make them work.

    • @lolilollolilol7773
      @lolilollolilol7773 3 роки тому +8

      I've got a bike, you can ride it if you like.
      It's got a basket, a bell that rings
      And things to make it look good.
      I'd give it to you if I could, but I borrowed it.

    • @shannond1511
      @shannond1511 2 роки тому

      What is happening here?

  • @TwoBassholesandaKaren7107
    @TwoBassholesandaKaren7107 3 роки тому +256

    Regardless of his mental health issues, hats off to Syd. He still was genius although not always able to access it.

  • @maureeningleston1501
    @maureeningleston1501 3 роки тому +45

    A tortured soul, trying to self medicate with catastrophic results, he was adding fuel to a towering inferno.

    • @JustDr.S
      @JustDr.S 3 роки тому +2

      Yeah, unusual story.

    • @julianarodriguex899
      @julianarodriguex899 3 роки тому +1

      12:49 classic Dr Grande

    • @rainsara2795
      @rainsara2795 3 роки тому +3

      @@Longtack55 yeah why is mentall illness + psychedelics = self medicating. Some are just down to experience stuff

  • @peeinginplaces185
    @peeinginplaces185 2 роки тому +37

    psychedelics can be devestating to a person's soul it can be extremely traumatic. I've had the worst experiences of my life on psychedelics and also got anxiety attacks. fortunately it's all gone now thank god. Watch out for your well being

    • @MaxRogala
      @MaxRogala 4 місяці тому +1

      If you dont mind me asking. its been 2 years since you said this, has any of it came back?

    • @luisd5098
      @luisd5098 2 місяці тому

      ​@MaxRogala has this happened to you?

  • @pamcornelius9122
    @pamcornelius9122 3 роки тому +29

    We knew a couple whose daughter went to NYC to study as a prima ballerina. She tried LSD there for the first time. Her drug use triggered Bi-Polar disorder and she has not been able to live independently since she came home over ten years ago. From my reading on the subject and experience with families in NAMI, it seems that major mental illness is genetic, but can be triggered by intense stress, marijuana, psychedelics and other narcotics.

    • @jamesb.9155
      @jamesb.9155 Рік тому +7

      Wish Dr. Grande would state such evidence and caution about drug use, including Cannabis by young people especially.

    • @elaynerc
      @elaynerc 8 місяців тому +1

      My understanding is that triggering doesn't mean she wouldn't be bipolar otherwise. Just that it may be triggered faster in life.

    • @CAMAROZSS
      @CAMAROZSS 2 місяці тому

      Bipolar is basically a type of seizure

    • @elizabethbaird3604
      @elizabethbaird3604 Місяць тому +3

      @@CAMAROZSSNo it’s not. That statement shows you know nothing about it.

    • @elizabethbaird3604
      @elizabethbaird3604 Місяць тому

      You might like to research a significant number of sources offering different perspectives supported by other scientific studies. I disagree equally with the analysis of the content creator.
      No gene has been isolated. It’s generally accepted by younger psychiatrists that childhood trauma is heavily involved in psychotic illnesses. It is impossible to distinguish between genes and intergenerational abuse. The older ones seem to remain attached to the “biomedical medical” taught in med school a generation or so ago. The theory has never been proven. The model is mostly scorned these days, particularly by those with lived experience of psychosis.
      If you’re relying on book learning and observations of people experiencing psychosis, then you know a limited amount about it. Lived experience trumps those sources of knowledge every time.

  • @alexanderbadillo704
    @alexanderbadillo704 3 роки тому +151

    This is a video right out of left field. Pretty awesome that you decided to analyze Syd Barrett thought. Cool video Dr. Grande.

    • @nonesuchone
      @nonesuchone 3 роки тому +2

      I take him for a fan

    • @JustDr.S
      @JustDr.S 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah. LSD BAD. Especially in the 60's. 🤣

    • @dirtysanchez941
      @dirtysanchez941 3 роки тому +1

      This is why Dr. Grande is #1

    • @vixen.vangogh
      @vixen.vangogh 3 роки тому

      Someone suggested Syd Barrett in a comment a few months back. I know I gave that comment a thumbs up and iirc several others did too. I wld like to know more about the good Dr's method for taking requests and then selecting from that list. I wonder if it's a long list. I bet it was once. Now I imagine it probably stays about the same. Get a few requests- knock a few out. Wld still be interesting to know about the process. Dr. Grande? Any insight? ;)

    • @JustDr.S
      @JustDr.S 3 роки тому +3

      @@vixen.vangogh You should write this same comment as a 'main' comment. Not as a reply. He'll see it, and so will others who agree with you. I think he reads the requests and chooses from there. 🙂

  • @sjtdxitditsitdurzirxur5926
    @sjtdxitditsitdurzirxur5926 3 роки тому +59

    We're just two lost souls swimming in a fish bowl, year after year, running over the same old ground. What have we found? The same old fears

    • @erikparent8176
      @erikparent8176 3 роки тому +3

      Poetry in motion!

    • @JustDr.S
      @JustDr.S 3 роки тому +2

      Yup. Same old.

    • @MrDpbazan1955
      @MrDpbazan1955 3 роки тому +1

      Try scripture for profound and relevant meaning!

    • @erikparent8176
      @erikparent8176 3 роки тому +1

      @@MrDpbazan1955
      I love profound scripture and read specific quotes often!

    • @mimszanadunstedt441
      @mimszanadunstedt441 3 роки тому +2

      Studies show people who think random quotes are profound are idiots.

  • @billie6814
    @billie6814 3 роки тому +26

    I have severe PTSD, depression, and anxiety. I can barely afford to be alive right now let alone to study. Dr. Grande's videos take my mind off the depression + they teach me so much. Dr. Grande's channel is awesome. It's been so good for me. 🙂

    • @Alan-zj5fz
      @Alan-zj5fz 3 роки тому +2

      I Hope You read My other comment.
      Take Care and Stay Safe💝

  • @odentenzin3129
    @odentenzin3129 Рік тому +12

    I've heard so many wonderful things about magic mushrooms but I can't easily get some, Is there any realiable source I can purchase from??

    • @sebastianfelipe515
      @sebastianfelipe515 Рік тому

      I'm so interested in the experience but am terrified of having a bad trip

    • @Marksonfixedmatches
      @Marksonfixedmatches Рік тому

      I did two grams last time, it was a thrilling experience and I enjoyed it

    • @sebastianfelipe515
      @sebastianfelipe515 Рік тому

      This whole thing is pretty new to me, can I try 3grams?

    • @Marksonfixedmatches
      @Marksonfixedmatches Рік тому

      @lioness Mindset where to search? Is it IG ??

    • @odentenzin3129
      @odentenzin3129 Рік тому

      @lioness Mindset alright, I'll reach out to him immediately to get some

  • @Mineav
    @Mineav 3 роки тому +234

    That shirt is fire. Really brings out your skin tone and looks fantastic.

    • @realpilBMF
      @realpilBMF 3 роки тому +16

      I agree - the vibrant green really pops! Maybe he’s trying to demonstrate kinship with his green plants 🌱 🪴 💚

    • @GGiblet
      @GGiblet 3 роки тому +11

      Yes! Fabulous colour for the Doc 💙

    • @alimar0604
      @alimar0604 3 роки тому +13

      Yes, Dr Grande really looks good in pastels although he is pretty dashing in darks 🇬🇧

    • @miraggg
      @miraggg 3 роки тому +11

      agreed, goes very well with his hair colour

    • @maxblak7446
      @maxblak7446 3 роки тому +10

      ....Ive said this more than once .... ✨class.

  • @101taiga
    @101taiga 3 роки тому +92

    “I’ve got a bike, you can ride it if you like.” Pink Floyd, with and without Barrett, was my favorite band throughout my teenage and early adult years. Still love them, especially Meddle, my all time favorite album of theirs.

    • @Ignirium
      @Ignirium 3 роки тому +2

      I love Pink Floyd and first experienced their music without Syd Barret, it feels easy to connect to and to flow with. I remember listening to Meddle and Atomic heart mother, and for me it didn't cause me to flow with it nor was it easy to connect with. I also listen to a love some odd music, mostly everything from Aphex Twin, but as odd as it is, it still has a flow that guides you, i didn't experience that with Syd's music. Frank Zappa's music is odd and his music has flow for me, it actually makes me laugh a lot.

    • @Fettclone1
      @Fettclone1 3 роки тому +1

      "Which one's Pink?"

    • @EyeLean5280
      @EyeLean5280 3 роки тому +3

      Yes, I love that one too. So many of Syd Barrett's lyrics harken back to childhood and those years of magic, fears, playfulness... and how blissfully unaware children are that it could ever come to an end.

    • @ambulocetusnatans
      @ambulocetusnatans 3 роки тому +4

      it would have been an entirely different band if he stayed with them.

    • @jokersharley567
      @jokersharley567 3 роки тому +1

      Have you got it yet?

  • @lovekai88
    @lovekai88 3 роки тому +2

    I am incredibly excited to watch this video! I was one of the people who requested this (I'm sure there may have been others) because I would love to hear what a professional in this field has to say. I have heard so many non-professional opinions about this from people who do research from the "UA-cam University" and the like haha. I am a huge fan of Pink Floyd, and I've loved Syd Barrett and have been intrigued with his life and music for decades. Thank you so much for taking this on, Dr. Grande! I appreciate it so much!

  • @sigurdkaputnik7022
    @sigurdkaputnik7022 3 роки тому +9

    Being a musician and a huge Pink Floyd fan myself, the sad story of Syd Barrett was the reason I never tried any hallucinogens (LSD, Mescalin, Psilocybin mushrooms). My imaginations are so weird, i fear if i would consume these substances, it would just carry me too far out, and i cant find a way back. Loosing control over my mind and my emotions is not something i can enjoy. There are many reports out there ,where people documented their first LSD-trip on camera and at some point they freak out and having panic attacks/social anxiety. This is something i definetly want to avoid.
    I've consumed mariuhana/canabis for some years, but after a funny onset period, it made me a little paranoid, neurotic and completely desinterested in anything. Boring, so I gave it up. Have not missed it yet.

  • @weightlessfilms5651
    @weightlessfilms5651 3 роки тому +85

    You should do one of these on Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys. Analyze how he was treated by his father, stress of the music business, his creative genius, psychological issues, drug use, and of course Eugene Landy. Would also love to hear your insight into Brian's state of mind in recent years. He still seems quite out of it a lot of the times. He attributes his current state of mind to the psychedelics that messed his brain up, but watching interviews with him in the '70's (before Landy), his speech and general awareness was still so much more lucid than it became once he was under Landy's control and even afterwards.

    • @PhoenixProdLLC
      @PhoenixProdLLC 3 роки тому +4

      "Love and Mercy" is a beautiful song.

    • @MrDpbazan1955
      @MrDpbazan1955 3 роки тому +4

      You just did!

    • @weightlessfilms5651
      @weightlessfilms5651 3 роки тому +3

      @Lauren McCabe I understand your concern for sensitivity. I'm a huge Brian Wilson and Beach Boys fan. As far as I'm concerned, an objective, informed analysis wouldn't portray Brian in a negative light. I believe he has been victimized by domineering figures such as his father and Landy. His story is ultimately triumphant considering how he's been able to rise above the adversity, and his contributions to music and the world are unparalleled. But there's still a lot of confusion as to what/who caused harm to Brian's psyche or distribution of blame between them. I'm no expert, but it seems that the abuse of his father, profound stress, mental health issues, addiction, and the abuse of Landy including "medications" he prescribed for years may have all played a part, but as I am no a mental health expert, my assessment doesn't amount to much. It appears to me that Landy coached him to believe that his brief foray into psychedelics is what damaged his brain most. Based on recent interviews, Brian, at least in part, still believes this to be the case. I'm speculating, but it's conceivable that Landy brainwashed Brian to believe the psychedelics were to blame in order to deflect family, friends, fans or the press from suspecting his "treatment" as being primarily responsible. Brian only took LSD a few times, and as I mentioned in my previous comment, at the peak of his addiction in the '70's to other substances, Brian was still relatively lucid and sharp in his interviews. It wasn't until Landy got a hold of him that the apparent cognitive confusion became evident. That's the aspect that I think Dr. Grande's insight would be invaluable to analyze.

    • @weightlessfilms5651
      @weightlessfilms5651 3 роки тому +4

      @@bluegirllove777 It's true. Murray Wilson, their father, physically and verbally abused them. It seems Brian received the majority of the abuse at the hands of his father. Murray was a songwriter and musician himself, but not particularly successful and his talent didn't hold a candle to Brian's. He essentially forced his own failed dreams on his sons, but once they were attaining success, the abuse didn't stop, rather he was bitter and resentful. It culminating in them finally firing him as their manager, a move for which Murray retaliated by selling their music catalogue to A&M Records. The impact of that was still felt decades later when Brian finally attained the rights back, causing further turmoil between Mike Love and Brian for writing credits and royalties. It's a sad story because it's possible the joy we've all received from the music of The Beach Boys may have never come to fruition if it weren't for Murray's relentless pushing at the beginning. Each member of the family played an integral role in their success - Murray's initial management, Brian's profound instrumental and harmony arrangements and groundbreaking production, Carl's guitar skills and introducing Chuck Berry and rock to Brian, Dennis' surfer lifestyle, which provided authentic subject matter for their early lyrics and image, and Mike Love's collaboration with Brian as a lyricist - and of course all (including Al Jardine and Bruce Johnston) their unique voices to create those angelic harmonies.

    • @monilangeKootenays
      @monilangeKootenays 3 роки тому

      Dr. Grande already did, and it was interesting.

  • @dekabmyco
    @dekabmyco 3 роки тому +84

    RIP SYD, WE LOVE YOU, SHINE ON!

  • @TH3-MONK
    @TH3-MONK 3 роки тому +3

    He lived around the corner from my mum, I used to see him walking to the local post office from time to time. He always looked lost.

  • @patriciarivas2638
    @patriciarivas2638 3 роки тому +15

    Dr. Grande looking sharp with the shirt! That’s a great color on you. Schizophrenia is such a cruel disease. To be trapped in your mind and there’s no way out is cruel.

    • @UrbanwarriorTheSOV
      @UrbanwarriorTheSOV 3 роки тому +1

      I agree. Also the blues & turquoises really suit Dr Grande.

    • @terywetherlow5980
      @terywetherlow5980 3 роки тому +1

      I also likes Dr. Grande's shirt color.... t

  • @stlvn6363
    @stlvn6363 3 роки тому +58

    "And not in an airplane... like superman". Had to laugh there. Thanks for doing such a sensitive analysis of Syd Barrett, he inspired one of my favourite Pink Floyd songs, even after he stopped playing with them he had an influence on "Wish You Were Here"

    • @BucketHeadianHagg
      @BucketHeadianHagg 3 роки тому +3

      "You reached for the secret too soon, and you cried for the moon .." This song was also inspired by, and sort of an homage to Syd, as well

  • @zappawench6048
    @zappawench6048 3 роки тому +126

    "Wish you were here..."

    • @ladymopar2024
      @ladymopar2024 3 роки тому +18

      Any true Pink Floyd fan knows that that's the song they wrote to him and they play that song every concert I love that song

    • @elainearchibald9020
      @elainearchibald9020 3 роки тому +4

      Love it!

    • @dirtysanchez941
      @dirtysanchez941 3 роки тому +5

      I grew up in the 70's. I remember when my older friend played me the whole Pink Floyd experience one weekend. I was so obsessed.. My parents thought it was causing me to be" too in my head." I'm a high functioning autistic person, yes, I'm in my head. I felt for Syd, and his mate's.

    • @AimeeAimee444
      @AimeeAimee444 3 роки тому +5

      We're just two lost souls, swimming in fish bowl, year after year.....

    • @tovenrvik6336
      @tovenrvik6336 3 роки тому +2

      Great Gig In The Sky are fantastic!

  • @sempermutabilibus8300
    @sempermutabilibus8300 3 роки тому +10

    Syd Barrett's story has always touched ever since I knew about its details when I was a teenager. From the moment I clicked on this video until it ended, my heart felt so heavy. I believe Syd was a lovely soul and I wish he'd received better mental health care. I hope he'd found some peace in his lifetime, though.
    Thank you Dr. Grande for this video. It means a lot to me to see you talking about Syd Barrett's case and I loved the way you handled it. ❤️

  • @afri-cola1594
    @afri-cola1594 3 роки тому +32

    After a couple of psychedelic trips I can say that I am no longer suicidal and my depression has significantly declined.

    • @Tyrannosaurine
      @Tyrannosaurine Рік тому +2

      Me too. It’s beautiful isn’t it.

    • @mela6885
      @mela6885 Рік тому +1

      That's cool not everyone has that experience and that was the point of the video.

    • @Tyrannosaurine
      @Tyrannosaurine Рік тому

      Yeah, those are always scams. I have a reliable connect. Thanks though.

  • @swiatlowiekuiste
    @swiatlowiekuiste 3 роки тому +120

    One thing I'm not sure about after years of watching dr Grande's videos is whether he's diagnosing anyone or just speculating?

    • @jamesjacocks6221
      @jamesjacocks6221 3 роки тому +4

      Still, I thought he gave clear disclaimers. If we (I, for instance) were asked to state what we ineluctably knew, you might get silence ( or an OM...) and there isn’t much entertainment in that.
      ..

    • @carolv8450
      @carolv8450 3 роки тому +9

      @@jamesjacocks6221 ineluctably?

    • @feleciaclemons5074
      @feleciaclemons5074 3 роки тому +6

      @@jamesjacocks6221 what say you????

    • @carolv8450
      @carolv8450 3 роки тому +2

      @Eternal - he is not diagnosing.

    • @ladennayoung2939
      @ladennayoung2939 3 роки тому +3

      I'm not sure. You really can't tell. Lol.

  • @MP-yo2fx
    @MP-yo2fx 3 роки тому +68

    I broke my brain using psychedelics. I was in a panic attack for over a year. I could not grasp reality and was in a constant state of panic and horror. By the grace of God it finally subsided after almost two years. I would have panic attacks in my dreams and would wake up, already living that nightmare, with an increased panic and sometimes the world would be spinning and flipping upside down.

    • @clasicks6670
      @clasicks6670 3 роки тому +3

      Damn how much did you consume? For some reason that feeling of the world flipping upside down and around is very enjoyable to me personally.

    • @JustDr.S
      @JustDr.S 3 роки тому +10

      Are you ok now? I hope so. Sounds horrifying.

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss 3 роки тому +8

      Sounds like a rough trip. This possibility, while rare, can happen in circumstances of mental instability, unresolved trauma, etc. Also it can be bad drugs or too much if you have never done anything like it before and your sense of "reality" is shaken. This is why therapists strongly recommend being with an experienced person to help you if you get into a downward spiral. Would you care to tell us what "psychedelic" you had and how much and the context you were in? It is important to be in a safe environment and should never be mixed with alcohol. I am glad you eventually got unstuck from your bad trip. People can get stuck like you did without any drugs from trauma.

    • @chickyshack1978
      @chickyshack1978 3 роки тому +6

      God jockeys have bad trips a lot BC they believe in supernatural things to begin with and start out their trips defensive.

    • @annpuckett281
      @annpuckett281 3 роки тому +8

      Same...I started developing many symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia after using DMT and mushrooms

  • @melissaalvarado94
    @melissaalvarado94 3 роки тому +199

    Mushrooms treated my depression and anxiety WAAAAY more than anti depressants and a therapist ever did.

    • @thebluehotel426
      @thebluehotel426 3 роки тому +35

      LSD enabled me to quite smoking. I kept picturing my pink lungs and just couldn't inhale smoke anymore.

    • @dianafernandez5226
      @dianafernandez5226 3 роки тому +10

      Melissa, u need Jesus girl.

    • @joanalorenzo6949
      @joanalorenzo6949 3 роки тому +1

      Aha

    • @melissaalvarado94
      @melissaalvarado94 3 роки тому +64

      @@dianafernandez5226 I think you do if you feel the need to offend people in UA-cam comments.

    • @matrig6
      @matrig6 3 роки тому +7

      I mean this question very respectfully, and am just curious about your experience: Do you feel you were still aware of what was going on around you while you were using mushrooms? Would you have been aware of any impending dangers (e.g. a fire, intruders)? I definitely appreciate that they work well for people's symptoms, as they did for you, and I am just concerned about the fact that my kids' grandparents are now using hallucinogenic mushrooms, so I'm not sure if the kids are safe in their hands, just in terms of whether the grandparents still have a handle on reality when under the influence and can notice the kinds of potential problems you need to see if there are vulnerable kids around.... Any perspective you can offer is appreciated. Thanks.

  • @MattSofianosGuitar
    @MattSofianosGuitar 3 роки тому +11

    Thank you for this. I have long held a fascination with Syd Barrett’s story and have grown increasingly frustrated by the mythology surrounding him.
    There is a lyric in the ‘Madcap Laughs’ album that struck me recently and it speaks to the mental health assessment you have reached:
    “Inside me I feel
    Alone and unreal”
    This hints very strongly at Depersonalisation / Derealisation.

  • @bellamaz1972
    @bellamaz1972 3 роки тому +162

    Would be interested to hear Dr Grande’s take on Vincent van Gogh.

    • @e_i_e_i_bro
      @e_i_e_i_bro 3 роки тому +9

      Yes! Many differing opinions there. From BPD to celiac disease (untreated and severe celiac can actually cause bad mental health problems, including psychosis). Also the fact that he may have been eating his paint? Lots to analyze there.

    • @benjaminnicholls5883
      @benjaminnicholls5883 3 роки тому +4

      @@e_i_e_i_bro He was eating his paints

    • @raymondtaylor6049
      @raymondtaylor6049 3 роки тому +5

      👂 Ear!

    • @raymondtaylor6049
      @raymondtaylor6049 3 роки тому +4

      I tried to buy Van Gough a pint.
      He said, 'No thanks, I've got one ear!'

    • @lilafeldman8630
      @lilafeldman8630 3 роки тому

      Yes!

  • @shawnfloyd8739
    @shawnfloyd8739 3 роки тому +90

    I’ve tried all types of psychedelics. Never have I or anyone I know who’ve used them ever thought they were capable of flight. They enhance reality primarily, not create an alternate reality where the impossible was suddenly possible.

    • @FoldupKibbles26
      @FoldupKibbles26 3 роки тому +14

      Exactly. Enhanced reality is a great description. Having said that, it lets you feel the extreme ends of emotions, and I wouldn't doubt if there's been someone who's had a bad trip and attempted suicide.

    • @shawnfloyd8739
      @shawnfloyd8739 3 роки тому +7

      @@FoldupKibbles26 I’d believe that perspective of suicide over believing that people suddenly having fanciful illusions of flight on any day. Thank you for sharing your perspective.

    • @H33t3Speaks
      @H33t3Speaks 3 роки тому +4

      It’s literally one of the easiest ways I’ve found to toss people out of my life at this point, the classic “My took and they .” Don’t get me wrong, drugs will do what drugs will do, but as for these rather classic and debunked stories... they just help me skip over the ignorant.

    • @shawnfloyd8739
      @shawnfloyd8739 3 роки тому +9

      @@H33t3Speaks you can disagree with people without tossing them out of your life :)

    • @mattgrover3096
      @mattgrover3096 3 роки тому +19

      I too am a life long acid head, a proponent of it. However, I have seen many many many things in this lifetime that had lead me to believe that sometimes for some reason, even an experienced head can lose their shit, have a bad trip and do something unthinkable. I watched a girl I had tripped with for years prior, take off her shoes, pants and jump feet first through second story window of her house. No warning, no words, just her normal good time trippy self then just before, a very disassociated blank look and just about the time I was gonna ask what was up she was flying out the window. So, needles to say, I am not sold on the psychedelics can't cause anything like that to happen. This is just one of so many examples it's not funny. She couldn't explain why she did that and after the hospital and a few weeks off she continued to trip often without similar incident to my knowledge. Also watched two friends from this group slowly go from "lil off"to fill blown schizophrenics over course of those same "heavy use"years. Two. From my small lil bubble of let's say 15 to 20. Take that for what it's worth. Take drugs at your own risk. Whatever you do don't get caught up in the side that says they will all fry your brain instantly and just as importantly, don't get caught up with the "as long as your in the right setting and headspace" it will be an enlightening experience guaranteed. Neither are right imo.

  • @saraheart2804
    @saraheart2804 2 роки тому +5

    With all that Syd went through, he always seemed to have a gentle and kind soul. RIP Syd.

  • @zaki2dunya321
    @zaki2dunya321 3 роки тому +30

    What a legend. I love psychadelic music and culture but it had a dark side. Any drug as strong as LSD can be bad for even a "sane" person. It can unearth alot of things a person may not be able to handle, I'll just say that. Don't ask how I know lol.

    • @yungbruhmane8751
      @yungbruhmane8751 3 місяці тому +1

      It shows a true dark side of humanity and in turn yourself and the people in charge of society fs. I noticed though when I stopped tripping a lot my interest in this type of stuff slowly faded away

  • @geneharrogate6911
    @geneharrogate6911 3 роки тому +63

    'In the sad town
    Cold iron hands clap
    The party of clowns outside
    Rain falls in gray, far away
    Please, please baby lemonade'.
    Sid, you maverlous nutter..

    • @SurrealisticSlumbers
      @SurrealisticSlumbers 3 роки тому +3

      Love that one

    • @benjaminfowler4513
      @benjaminfowler4513 3 роки тому +2

      His solo stuff is just so good it's brought me to tears before.

    • @mattgilbert7347
      @mattgilbert7347 3 роки тому +2

      Rats rats lay down flat
      We don't need you we act like that
      And if you think you're unloved
      Well, we know about that!

    • @farhanismail9760
      @farhanismail9760 3 роки тому +1

      a clock sent through a washing machine, if you have taken acid , u know

  • @MargotHypnos
    @MargotHypnos 3 роки тому +55

    Sylvia Plath, please. She is one of your own.

  • @lnc-to4ku
    @lnc-to4ku 3 роки тому

    Excellent analysis, Dr. Grande! The questions you brought up about which may come first, the illness or the drug use, and other comments throughout, were very thought provoking!

  • @absinthedream9668
    @absinthedream9668 2 роки тому +2

    If you've ever experienced a full blown bad acid trip that's taken you weeks & weeks just to feel normal again afterwards you'd have no doubt that huge consumption in a short period of time could flick the lights off permanently.

  • @jordiejordan8249
    @jordiejordan8249 3 роки тому +221

    *All in all we're just another brick in Dr. Grande's wall 🧱*

    • @virtue_signal_
      @virtue_signal_ 3 роки тому +5

      LOL

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss 3 роки тому +4

      😁

    • @kc3718
      @kc3718 3 роки тому +9

      yeah, but can you see the writing on the wall ? That is the question.

    • @mcd5478
      @mcd5478 3 роки тому +6

      Ha! 😂👍🏼 great comment. Shine on, you crazy diamond! 💎

    • @maxblak7446
      @maxblak7446 3 роки тому +3

      @@kc3718 💥 👊

  • @realpilBMF
    @realpilBMF 3 роки тому +37

    I have been a fan of Syd Barrett’s music since my teens and a fan of Dr. Grande since The Rewired Soul UA-cam scandal of 2019. I will enjoy this video greatly!

  • @DM-zd2dc
    @DM-zd2dc 3 роки тому +4

    "That misconception is usually clarified on making contact with the ground". Great line.

  • @caroledrury1411
    @caroledrury1411 2 роки тому +13

    Excellent analysis. I knew of three people, men in the seventies that had been creative children growing up then in their early 20s took acid and also became schizophrenic. So hard to tell what came first.

  • @kevinross6235
    @kevinross6235 3 роки тому +60

    "People on psychedelics may believe they are capable of flight. That misconception is usually clarified upon making contact with the ground" I was not expecting the joke just like the flying person wasn't expecting to hit the ground

    • @unconventionalguitarist9129
      @unconventionalguitarist9129 3 роки тому +4

      His joke fell flat

    • @Trowblood
      @Trowblood 3 роки тому +8

      He's in error here.
      This is just urban legend that LSD makes people think they can fly; in the same way as the rumours about flashbacks.
      People with severe personality disorders shouldn't likely indulge but most individuals would be a thousand times more likely to jump or fall to their death on alcohol, than on a hallucinogen.

    • @TheAtl198
      @TheAtl198 3 роки тому +2

      @@Trowblood No one is talking about "personality disorders". We are talking about mood disorders, thought disorders, and psychotic disorders - pretty much everything BUT personality disorders. Not sure what you are trying to say?

    • @Trowblood
      @Trowblood 3 роки тому

      @@TheAtl198 I'm saying people don't jump from windows thinking they can fly just because they are tripping balls.

    • @Trowblood
      @Trowblood 3 роки тому +1

      @@TheAtl198 As an aside; Syd Barret is about the perfect example of someone with personality disorders.
      Mood disorders, thought disorders, and psychotic disorders all fall under personality disorders.

  • @Vexxed
    @Vexxed 3 роки тому +255

    Interesting assessment that people with schizophrenia might be more prone to drugs use (rather than the other way around) I'm not familiar with ethics or methodology in psychology, I'm curious if there is a way for studies to test this hypothesis?

    • @KathySong1
      @KathySong1 3 роки тому +65

      It makes sense in the way that people tend to self medicate with illegal substances.
      Maybe before they even realise there is an issue with their mental health too.

    • @JustDr.S
      @JustDr.S 3 роки тому +24

      Yeah, self medicating. Any drug that will work.

    • @geraldfriend256
      @geraldfriend256 3 роки тому +4

      Ethics and methodology would mean meta-analysis of a lot of data..no study would fit the ethics question.

    • @godlessfornicater
      @godlessfornicater 3 роки тому +9

      Wasn't there a study held on identical twins, following them over decades, to study aging process based on lifestyle? And some of the twins would develop bipolar disorder or schizophrenia because they would use drugs, while the sober twin would not. (Now I don't know about the methodology of this study.)

    • @ba_charles
      @ba_charles 3 роки тому +1

      Uhh are you familiar with Google?

  • @SoftTangerineDreams
    @SoftTangerineDreams 3 роки тому

    Thank you so much for this, I have been waiting for this for so long. Amazing analysis!

  • @Nicoleisswole
    @Nicoleisswole 3 роки тому +1

    Oh shit!! I’ve been watching you for so long and Syd is by far one of my favorite artists- thank you for making this!

  • @pargelenis8928
    @pargelenis8928 3 роки тому +44

    Wasn't expecting
    for you to analyze syd barrett, early floyd is some of the best they made

    • @ladymopar2024
      @ladymopar2024 3 роки тому +3

      Oh my gosh I totally agree and get in arguments with people about it

    • @SoftTangerineDreams
      @SoftTangerineDreams 3 роки тому +3

      Their debut is definitely one of their best and See Emily Play is my favorite song of all time.

    • @ladymopar2024
      @ladymopar2024 3 роки тому

      @@SoftTangerineDreams my two favorites are echoes and dogs

    • @SoftTangerineDreams
      @SoftTangerineDreams 3 роки тому +1

      @@ladymopar2024 Good picks!

  • @shanelorrison5224
    @shanelorrison5224 3 роки тому +65

    “Turn on, tune in, and drop out” Maybe a speculative analysis on Timothy Leary?

    • @erikparent8176
      @erikparent8176 3 роки тому +4

      And bingo was his name-oh!

    • @matthewbosse153
      @matthewbosse153 3 роки тому +6

      This one. I'd love to hear Dr. Grande's thoughts on him!

    • @erikparent8176
      @erikparent8176 3 роки тому +6

      @@matthewbosse153
      Yes, I enjoy any topic that leads to metaphysics!
      And, of course if he mentions Timothy Leary and by association, Ram Dass will have to be included!
      Then its show time!

    • @scottmoldenhauer9390
      @scottmoldenhauer9390 3 роки тому +2

      yes

  • @orbit5311
    @orbit5311 3 роки тому +30

    Syd Barrett is one of the greatest, most influential, and underrated musicians ever. Thank you for this video

    • @sleepystars8482
      @sleepystars8482 3 роки тому +3

      Agreed, I particularly enjoy The Madcap Laughs. Brilliant album, highly underrated.

    • @Georgeanne17
      @Georgeanne17 Рік тому

      I don't think he has ever been underrated. He was cancelled when that term was not known. However the band honored him and most people acknowledge him as a result to this day.

  • @floydpinkerton1703
    @floydpinkerton1703 3 роки тому +12

    My favourite band of all time. I asked for you to analyse Barrett. Not sure if it was my suggestion that prompted this video. Very happy to see it

    • @annieholbis2430
      @annieholbis2430 3 роки тому +3

      From the comments, a few of us seem to have requested this

  • @tomboy5212
    @tomboy5212 3 роки тому +27

    I think it depends on the level of mental stability beforehand.
    Micro doses of LSD are proving to be extremely beneficial in a lot of patients with PTSD, Depression, ETC.
    Moderation my friends ✌🏻

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss 3 роки тому +1

      🕊

    • @MrDpbazan1955
      @MrDpbazan1955 3 роки тому +1

      Then you take it!

    • @tomboy5212
      @tomboy5212 3 роки тому +1

      @@MrDpbazan1955 my point was
      If we knew then what we know now the great Syd my not have lost his way and would still be jammin like Waters or Gilmour
      💕💕

    • @MrDpbazan1955
      @MrDpbazan1955 3 роки тому +2

      @@tomboy5212 I see your point. I see things ultimately as fate. We never lose hope but once the story is over there's no changing it. I feel for Syd. Yet he did live until 60, however painfully perhaps. A bit of a Brian Jones vibe to his story. Now, too, even though I'm on in years I never got in to Pink Floyd. I thought they were fine, but I never bought one of their records. The Wall seemed rock opera, and it was not rockish enough the whole catalog. So, my PF knowledge isn't anything really. I'd stay away from LSD entirely still. As what they say is now safe, well still might not be

  • @tickedoffnow
    @tickedoffnow 2 роки тому +4

    Poor Syd
    his tragedy is the reason hallucinogenic drugs scare me ☹️

  • @candiceyoung8244
    @candiceyoung8244 3 роки тому +5

    He really was a talented young man,full of promise and a bright future. What happened to him is absolutely heartbreaking. Thank you for covering him Dr💙

  • @albertosamaniego2476
    @albertosamaniego2476 3 роки тому +15

    The lunatic is in my head
    The lunatic is in my head
    You raise the blade, you make the change
    You re-arrange me 'til I'm sane
    You lock the door
    And throw away the key
    There's someone in my head but it's not me...

    • @RoMaRobMarq
      @RoMaRobMarq 3 роки тому +1

      Shine on you crazy diamond?

    • @albertosamaniego2476
      @albertosamaniego2476 3 роки тому +5

      @@RoMaRobMarq Brain Damage

    • @angelahamon6730
      @angelahamon6730 3 роки тому +1

      sounds like a lobotomy? raise the blade and make a change? That procedure was popular for a while. . . .

  • @AimeeAimee444
    @AimeeAimee444 3 роки тому +24

    A high school mate I knew had a mental break after taking acid. He never recovered, remains in a psych ward today and believes he's John Lennon. His life was tragically altered due to not understanding how psychedelics can affect your mind especially at that age and not discovering he had a predisposition to schizophrenia.

    • @lisbethbird8268
      @lisbethbird8268 3 роки тому +7

      I saw a bipolar friend triggered into mania by it...pretty bad, some hospitalization, kicked out of college for menacing behavior. He recovered, though. Stopped all drugs except weed and his meds. Won't even drink coffee these days. College let him come back. He eventually did really well though it took a long time for him to get stable. Knew another guy who fried his brain by taking way too much. When I met him almost thought there was disability. Decades later he is completely different guy and a mechanical engineer. Again, his recovery took years and years.

    • @ColbyBarradas
      @ColbyBarradas Рік тому +5

      You gotta know how to navigate the psycadelics and you HAVE to know what to expect before you take them. Psycadelics open your mind up for construction: good and bad. If you can balance out your thoughts and focus on positivity and not negativity...you'll be just fine. "The psychotic drowns in the same waters the mystics swims with delight." You MUST respect these compounds. Often these cases of people having psychotic breaks is because they didn't know what to expect and so the experience took hole of them and threw them around. You gotta research these compounds and know exactly what to expect so that when things get difficult on your trip, you don't spiral out of control. Breaks happen when people lose belief in who they are and the reality they live in. Before you go into a psycadelic trip, ground yourself in your beautiful life and embrace the journey you're about to go on. Know that you're safe and you'll be fine after the trip. Just be cautious of paranoid thoughts because once we give paranoid thoughts any bit of attention...they will steal all the positivity from your trip and spiral it downwards. Once trips go downwards, it's best to try to distract yourself or face the fear with confidence and bravery.

  • @lilafeldman8630
    @lilafeldman8630 3 роки тому +4

    I once met a woman who had paranoid schizophrenia. She said it started after she did "hard teas" in her younger years. She drank alot of herbal teas with strong herbs. She was of this age group, in the counterculture. She eventually lived a stable life, had a son.

  • @CaitMcCormack
    @CaitMcCormack 3 роки тому +3

    I’m a Counseling student doing online classes and your videos are so helpful and interesting! Thank you 🙏

  • @PeasGraveny
    @PeasGraveny 3 роки тому +30

    Great vid,Dr.G. I was always told by medical professionals that I was putting myself at risk of long term psychological problems if I continued with my drug use (especially the acid) and yet my own experiences led me to believe that rather than harming me LSD seemingly had the potential to FIX problems such as my very low self esteem and opiate addiction (the.latter having it's roots in the former,of course).Now I see that the medical community are looking at LSD as a potential treatment for alcoholism and opiate addiction.

  • @timb171
    @timb171 3 роки тому +14

    'That misconception is usually clarified on contact with the ground'

  • @piikapoka
    @piikapoka 3 роки тому +5

    A lot of parents I find especially mom's, will deny their child's mental illness to the grave. It's like they are so scared of mental illnesses that they will never admit their children have it.

    • @maureeningleston1501
      @maureeningleston1501 3 роки тому +5

      So true, I've seen it before, where family members are embarrassed by the mentally ill person, if they broke their leg there would be no hesitation in taking them too the hospital, yet they fail too realise mental illness needs treatment also.

    • @kendallperry9247
      @kendallperry9247 3 роки тому +3

      Exactly, and this is why it is so disappointing and almost angering sometimes to see his sister Rosemary viciously try to claim that Syd wasn't psychotic. Giving into stigma does not dismantle it.
      It is understandable though. We are only just starting to grow momentum on understanding for mental health issues, especially related to drugs, in recent years. Being a middle class brit in the 1960's, you would've essentially been brainwashed that you could not talk about such things, let alone admit that a family member of yours was suffering from it.

    • @piscesempress1978
      @piscesempress1978 Рік тому

      Yeah blame it on the moms, alot of dads do the same thing, even more, oh no not my child!!!

  • @ronniebutler3635
    @ronniebutler3635 3 роки тому +4

    Hi from Cambridge ! We live very near to his final home off Cherry Hinton Road and were very lucky to see the unveiling of a plaque in his honor at the University here in Cambridge where my son is due to study music. We live near Granchester. Thank you for this thoughtful review on Syd Barrett.

  • @jefflilly2001
    @jefflilly2001 3 роки тому +56

    Holden Caulfield would be an interesting subject.

    • @NobleNemesis
      @NobleNemesis 3 роки тому +2

      "..and Holdden Caulfield was a friend of miine... woah o0o0oah, and we go drinking from time to time... and I fiiind... It gets harder everytime!"

    • @robinrubendunst869
      @robinrubendunst869 3 роки тому

      I though Dr Grande did profile Holden Caulfield...

    • @kgs2280
      @kgs2280 3 роки тому

      Hunter Thompson would be, too.

    • @John-ip3xm
      @John-ip3xm 3 роки тому

      "The Catcher in the Rye" was banned from my Catholic High School, as well as "A Clockwork Orange" by Stanley Kubrick and a "Brave New World", by Aldous Huxley. Boo, Hiss!...I read them at home, anyway, hee, hee!!!! John Keating

    • @DawnSuttonfabfour
      @DawnSuttonfabfour 3 роки тому +2

      Not that whining bastard.

  • @sherunswithscissors
    @sherunswithscissors 3 роки тому +19

    Great topic but I must admit it makes me feel old! I don’t think the fact that his sister denied any mental health issues needs to be given much weight - it is common enough still for family to deflect from the ‘stigma’ of schizophrenia.

  • @cyn37211
    @cyn37211 2 роки тому +5

    When Barrett passed away, there was a DSM-IV manual found in his effects. The book was creased open at the section dealing with bipolar disorder, and he’d handwritten in several notes. I don’t know if he was diagnosed with it, or if he was self-diagnosing.
    Also, one of the drugs he used heavily was Quaaludes (mandrax), which are super-addictive and can literally destroy parts of the brain, sometimes permanently.

  • @vixen.vangogh
    @vixen.vangogh 3 роки тому

    YESSSS! Thank you so much!!! Been waiting on this one.

  • @erikparent8176
    @erikparent8176 3 роки тому +51

    There are a segment of mental health professionals advocating for low dose psilocybin treatment centers for people with chronic depression.
    The results are often spectacular!

    • @MrDpbazan1955
      @MrDpbazan1955 3 роки тому +2

      You do it! Let us know how it works out!!

    • @erikparent8176
      @erikparent8176 3 роки тому +7

      @@MrDpbazan1955
      It's illegal around my parts and I would try it!
      I dont need too though because I can turn off my mind at will and experience an egoless state,when ever I want, which is often.
      I know of meditators that ingest psycedelics and nothing of note happens because they are in a permanent meditative or egoless state!
      Psycedelics simply anesthetize ones primitive ego and one experiences their soul!
      That sounds pretty religious to me!

    • @erikparent8176
      @erikparent8176 3 роки тому +1

      @@therealdeal3672
      Yupper! 😉

    • @mistym0rning
      @mistym0rning 3 роки тому +2

      @@erikparent8176 “one experiences their soul”, okay I mean that’s fine for someone to believe that based on personal experience and whatnot, but scientifically speaking there is no such thing as a soul and it’s all about activating and stimulating different parts of the brain and how they interact, shape our perception of reality, allow us to experience different sensory states, etc. Nothing really spiritual about it, even if it may feel that way.

    • @erikparent8176
      @erikparent8176 3 роки тому +5

      @@mistym0rning
      It must be experienced it's not logic based.
      It has to be felt.
      Intuition is deeper than thought.
      The entire Cosmos was created without thought.
      There is an intellegence in thoughtless awareness that is not conceptual.
      The human mind cannot grasp it.
      Science is often changing and refining concepts.
      What science "knows" today often changes tomorrow.
      I chuckle when some say" its science."
      I think to myself "oh do you mean in ten years it will be obsolete and some other " known" will take its place!"
      Thoughts are just sounds that point to objects!
      That can never express the deepest reality!

  • @sessaly7197
    @sessaly7197 3 роки тому +50

    Could you do a whole video on the usage of psilocybin in a therapy context, for treating depression for example? I am really curious about the current research status.

    • @RoMaRobMarq
      @RoMaRobMarq 3 роки тому +8

      That would be great. It's a topic I'm deeply interested in.

    • @Gigipretty64
      @Gigipretty64 3 роки тому +5

      Yes please

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss 3 роки тому

      No...people should not speculate about entheogens without experience of them. What would be the point? That would be like someone blind since birth composing an essay on color. (Ridiculous)

    • @RoMaRobMarq
      @RoMaRobMarq 3 роки тому +3

      @@kristinabliss yeah. But Dr. Grande isn't diagnosed with any mental issues he regularly talks about on his channel, yet he does it from an educational and scientific view. He could possibly do the same with this topic, no?

    • @sessaly7197
      @sessaly7197 3 роки тому +7

      @@kristinabliss It's not about speculations. I just would like him to analyze the current research status of psilocybin for treating depression.

  • @richardphilpott1225
    @richardphilpott1225 3 роки тому +1

    Amazing amount of comments on Syd. He seems to be more popular now than ever. Been a Syd fan since the beginning. Thanks for what you do.

  • @harri673
    @harri673 3 роки тому

    Thanks Dr. Grande! I asked for this a while back and you delivered. So cool. Guess it's time to check out your patreon :D

  • @TheMoonPool
    @TheMoonPool 3 роки тому +23

    I remember learning that "psychedelics cause latent psychotics to become active." Then recently I looked that up and it seems to be only PCP can cause permanent change.
    Thank you for this video.

    • @aa.4639
      @aa.4639 3 роки тому +1

      Most all drugs can cause the so-called "drug induced psycosis". It is temporary and will subside when the drug is discuntinued and treatment. But it takes from 2 to 6 months

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss 3 роки тому +3

      @@aa.4639 Including sugar

    • @kayzbluegenes
      @kayzbluegenes 3 роки тому +4

      happened to my brother-in-law - one he day he's fine (dropping a LOT of acid) - next day, his mind dropped (totally psychotic) - been in a mental institution ever since - very scary! 😵🤯🤪

    • @nancyhernandez2271
      @nancyhernandez2271 3 роки тому +2

      Meth has been shown to change the brain.

    • @ambulocetusnatans
      @ambulocetusnatans 3 роки тому +4

      Before the word "psychedelics" was coined, they were called "psychotomimetics", because some of the symptoms appeared to doctors of the time to mimic psychosis.

  • @briankelley7918
    @briankelley7918 3 роки тому +22

    I worked in a mental institution in the '80s they had a client who took hallucinogenics and never came off of them it was very sad he had moments of clarity which was even sadder because he knew it was not going to last long.

  • @H-OhmStudios
    @H-OhmStudios 3 роки тому +5

    This was great. I've read much about Barrett over the years and often people commenting from the fringes of the lamentable Syd story get it wrong. It was refreshing to hear an accurate retelling of the story, as well as a cogent assessment of his possible condition.
    I'm a fan both of Pink Floyd and Barrett's solo work. It's interesting to note that the rest of the band initially thought Syd was in the throws of some rockstar hedonistic ego trip and that his drug use alone was responsible for him becoming a liability to the band, whose star was rising. You can see in more contemporary interviews their remorse at not understanding that there was some underlying mental illness issues with Syd at the time (their immediate single, post Syd, 'Point Me To The Sky', even seems either to be a pale imitation of Syd's style or a mockery of his madness).
    It was nice that in later years, the band made sure that Syd was well taken care of in terms of royalties.
    It's a heartbreaking story and it was nice to see a video that didn't linger on the sensational and often apocryphal elements of the Syd Barrett story.

  • @cerebralcoma4850
    @cerebralcoma4850 2 роки тому +8

    Syd was on "Mandrax" more than any other thing, that was the main substance that made him crazy....

  • @BrookeWinter82
    @BrookeWinter82 3 роки тому +3

    I saw someone request this analysis of Syd not too long ago-you obviously pay attention to your subscribers, which is fantastic! I'm so glad I found your channel. ☺ Great video & insight on Syd!

  • @christianclayton3228
    @christianclayton3228 3 роки тому +21

    Sounds like you’re talking about PCP not psychedelics with people jumping out windows and seeing three hand Grenades

    • @vnmeister9418
      @vnmeister9418 3 роки тому +3

      Depends which psychedelic and other factors when experimenting that psychedelic, I’ve definitely seen multiples of existing attributes (or just straight up hallucinations of things that weren’t there altogether) in the past on such drugs (verified by test kits that it was said drug being mainly LSD).

    • @christianclayton3228
      @christianclayton3228 3 роки тому +7

      @@therealdeal3672 me ? Nah . But I hope you know what’s going on. Psychedelics are being studied for their benefits in healing brain trauma , depression , reduction in end of life anxiety. The military is studying its use for soldiers in the area of performance enhancement , as well as the potential visual and cognitive benefits.

    • @Olivetree80
      @Olivetree80 3 роки тому +3

      Yeah, that's such an outdated perspective

    • @patrickburton1401
      @patrickburton1401 3 роки тому

      @@christianclayton3228 I am 24. I smoke way too much weed. I have my whole adult hood. My parents have always suspected that I at least have ADHD or something while growing up, but I played music. Loved it. Still do, but it was the only thing I was passionate about. I used to trip I was convinced I felt god. I have heavy ptsd from a time I was up way too long during quarantine cause I also used to do coke and other stuff and I almost OD’d in my bathroom during a trip. I lived alone. Psychedelics caused me to have severe BPD and I have not even found a therapist yet. I live with my parents now. If I didn’t get a puppy when I was alone I would’ve killed myself. I will never be able to think again because of psychedelics. Weed is a heavy crutch for me atm, and it was my gateway

    • @TheBlueEmu98
      @TheBlueEmu98 3 роки тому

      @Patrick Burton Seek a therapist, man. Especially places that offer brain-spotting.
      Am 22, have CPTSD from childhood, and gave myself drug induced psychosis after a night of LSD/lots of weed. Having someone to talk to helps significantly (as well as a puppy). I went to the darkest locations of my mind and was not ready to see what I asked for, but overtime I am slowly becoming thankful for my experience.
      It helped me develop the self realization to understand the inner workings of my mind. Your inner turmoil stems from somewhere else, not the drug itself and once that curtain is opened, it’s never closed. It’s all about your mindset. The ball is in your court

  • @SarahDunlap
    @SarahDunlap 3 роки тому

    Maybe the best Dr Grande video of all times. Love the studio and the content! Damn you knock it out the park for some of us 🤓😍

  • @justsomebloke460
    @justsomebloke460 3 роки тому

    Great video Dr Grande
    Been wanting you to do an analysis on Syd for a while, awesome job

  • @jonnylumberjack6223
    @jonnylumberjack6223 3 роки тому +108

    I've known a lot of people who have taken a LOT of psychedelics. Not one has ever, ever thought they could fly. Honestly, I thought that was an old wives tale, not something that had factual evidence to back it up.

    • @puturro
      @puturro 3 роки тому +2

      Good for them!

    • @j.jwhitty5861
      @j.jwhitty5861 3 роки тому +5

      I know a woman a few years back had taken a microdot on holidays and jumped out the Hotel window imagining there was someone in her room trying to kill her. Sher busted her legs up so bad one had to be amputated.

    • @jonnylumberjack6223
      @jonnylumberjack6223 3 роки тому +20

      @@j.jwhitty5861 Yikes :( Still, she didn't think she could fly, she was having an epically bad trip. Poor woman. I think where you indulge, and with whom, makes a HUGE difference to the experience you have.

    • @MacetazzOpina
      @MacetazzOpina 3 роки тому +3

      @@j.jwhitty5861 sounds like she could’ve schizophrenia

    • @peggycearnach8034
      @peggycearnach8034 3 роки тому +5

      The flying thing is true, in a way. E.g., if you wanted to go somewhere and a cliff was before you, you wouldn’t even notice it. You would have perception issues with depth, distance etc. Everything is so warped that feeling like you can fly is nothing unusual. Wanting to roam and escape the mundane can lead some people wrong. So, it’s not an old wives tale, and the flash backs are very real. I was lucky that someone who was with me stopped me from walking off a beach cliff. It’s like living out a dream without the benefit of the brain chemicals that stop you acting out the motions. I think it’s extremely dangerous for some.

  • @rocket3254
    @rocket3254 3 роки тому +24

    From my home town. You often use to see him walking around just like anyone else

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss 3 роки тому +2

      🌬🌪👻

    • @gracebard6664
      @gracebard6664 3 роки тому +7

      Me too, a lifelong resident. Because most of us wouldn't recognise Syd, there were always rumours about some man or other behaving strangely.......... that was him. But, as you say, he was quietly getting on with his life.

    • @Clare-tea
      @Clare-tea 3 роки тому +1

      @@gracebard6664 you live in Cambridge?

    • @gracebard6664
      @gracebard6664 3 роки тому +1

      @@Clare-tea Yes I do.

    • @alrimate3936
      @alrimate3936 3 роки тому

      @@gracebard6664 I hope the kids weren’t bullying him when he was out and about because of his odd behaviour as someone who grew up in England around the 2000s kids could be really mean and insensitive

  • @grayaj23
    @grayaj23 3 роки тому +27

    Thank you for a balanced treatment of the topic. I had a middle-school and high-school friend who developed severe schizophrenia, and I saw how terrible it was for him. He was a heavy drug user too, but I believe his illness came first.

    • @arkham5940
      @arkham5940 4 місяці тому

      Nah. That’s just not real. So you’re saying that he’s got the illness, and the first thing he does, is drugs? Nah. Drugs first, then ilness

    • @user-jo8vl5dh2v
      @user-jo8vl5dh2v 3 місяці тому

      @@arkham5940makes perfect sense that he would self
      medicate

  • @autumnedwards4448
    @autumnedwards4448 3 роки тому +2

    I was almost scared to watch this video because Pink Floyd is one of my favorite bands and I was afraid what you might say Dr Grande. But you handled the analysis faultlessly. Thank you for this one!
    P.S. I absolutely love that color shirt on you!💙

  • @j0nnyism
    @j0nnyism 3 роки тому +22

    Thankyou very much Dr Grande. I know you must receive an enormous number of requests so this one is greatly appreciated. Such an idiosyncratic talent from the 60s. First rock and roll star to sing with a distinct English accent. Influenced artists as diverse as Bowie and the Sex Pistols. Shine on.

    • @sarawhiteside4024
      @sarawhiteside4024 3 роки тому +1

      Spotless, excellent request, eternal sunshine of the mind or dark side of the moon: Dr Grande is succinct, sage &, hopefully, spreading Syd to receptive & curious.

  • @jockospillink7318
    @jockospillink7318 3 роки тому +21

    Overhead the albatross
    Hangs motionless upon the air
    And deep beneath the rolling waves
    In labyrinths of coral caves
    The echo of a distant time
    Comes willowing across the sand
    And everything is green and submarine

    • @j0nnyism
      @j0nnyism 3 роки тому +3

      He loved the rhyme of the ancient mariner

    • @clasicks6670
      @clasicks6670 3 роки тому +4

      Echoes is great especially on LSD....

    • @stlvn6363
      @stlvn6363 3 роки тому

      @@clasicks6670 LSD not always required 😂 I loved that song from around the age of 8 x

    • @clasicks6670
      @clasicks6670 3 роки тому +1

      @@stlvn6363 it is not required but it does enhance the Echoes of a distant time....

  • @LDiamondz
    @LDiamondz 3 роки тому +10

    Great analysis of Syd, psychedelics and schizophrenia. I was hoping you'd do this one! ❤ Thanks for the educational content, and the non judgmental way you speak about drug use. Oh, love that color on you, btw! 🤗

  • @ThoughtfulAl
    @ThoughtfulAl 3 роки тому +1

    "clarified on making contact with the ground". Thanks Dr Grande, nice to see your smile. You seem to be about the most level-headed person on the internet.

  • @dr.2335
    @dr.2335 3 роки тому +25

    A video in the same vein on Peter Green of Fleetwood Mac would be brilliant.

    • @d.nakamura9579
      @d.nakamura9579 3 роки тому +2

      Yeah, I was thinking the same thing about Peter Green. Pretty much everyone seems to attribute his psychosis to a bad LSD trip. Another possibility is that the LSD that was around back then was being administered in doses that would be considered WAY too high nowadays. Also, whatever was going around could’ve very well been adulterated with other substances.
      Overdosing or having a bad trip on this kind of stuff sure seems super scary. But people who have interest in the subject should read Michael Pollan’s book “How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence”. It’s an EXCELLENT book on the history of psychedelics like LSD, but also psilocybin (mushrooms), DMT, and Ayahuasca. LSD still scares me, but after reading it I’ve become interested in the potential for microdosing psilocybin and/or guided trips. Mushrooms as a psychedelic are now semi-legal in both Colorado and California. It’s now legal to grow or possess, but legal retailing is not here yet like it is for cannabis (another beneficial drug in the right applications).

    • @dr.2335
      @dr.2335 3 роки тому

      @@d.nakamura9579 I’ve taken LSD numerous times, only ‘bad trip’ I’ve had was when me and a friend started experiencing a form of telepathy and got stuck in each other’s heads. We realised early on that we were talking without speaking, got euphoric over it but then it got overwhelming. I still maintain if we just split up that we would’ve been fine. Can’t recommend acid strongly enough to anyone. It opens doors.

    • @blakeschreckenbach679
      @blakeschreckenbach679 3 роки тому

      Or Brian Wilson for that matter

    • @dr.2335
      @dr.2335 3 роки тому

      @@blakeschreckenbach679 Dennis Wilson too, he and Charlie Manson were lovers from what I’ve read. Very interesting time in modern history.

  • @inhalefarts
    @inhalefarts 3 роки тому +14

    I have had the opposite problem with flight. I ate the wrong mushrooms one time and have not been able to stay on the ground since then. It's ok, it's actually really good for your spine and feet.

  • @dkelban
    @dkelban 3 роки тому +6

    From one therapist to another: great analysis. Love your site. Another possibility is that his early oddness is what we've called prodromal symptoms of schizophrenia, that later blossom into full blown schizophrenia. It's too bad we don't have access to his family history in terms of their mental issues. Also, it's hard for me to believe that powerful psychedelics don't help bring on or worsen schizophrenia (your#1 possibility), as they mess with dopamine receptors in the brain, which to my somewhat limited knowledge, is involved with schizophrenia. I guess my point is that pre-existing vulnerabilities (heredity and stress, for example) may predispose to full blown illness if that body system is further tested by drugs.

  • @nataliefoxmartin9764
    @nataliefoxmartin9764 3 роки тому

    Thank you soooooo much for sharing this information in a non-biased form, as always. I’m very interested in this topic.

  • @jonnylumberjack6223
    @jonnylumberjack6223 3 роки тому +56

    Poor Syd. I loved psychadelics back in the day, and other than feeling like I'd been physically beaten the next day, I never had anything less than a great time. I'd be really interested in a conversation about why some people have these awful reactions to drugs and others don't. It's not a simple matter of dosage. It would also be interesting to know why some people have addictive personalities and others don't. I'm (relatively) sensible, I've never touched heroin or crack but I've done pretty much everything else and I've never felt even close to addiction. Even prescription drugs I know some people have been addicted to for decades, me, I just stopped taking them with no ill effects or withdrawals whatsoever. How come? Anyways, shine on, crazy diamonds :)

    • @PhoenixProdLLC
      @PhoenixProdLLC 3 роки тому

      Obviously because you're morally and intellectually superior to addicts. 🙄

    • @aa.4639
      @aa.4639 3 роки тому +13

      This has a lot to do with a persons predisposition to mental problems. We did drugs in my youth. We took the same drugs in the same amounts..And it went 3 ways... Some were fine,.some got severe emotional and mental distress and some went off the rails all the way. The more "damaged" and fragile you are( traumas from childhood abuse) the harder you fall. The drugs give you a temporary high and a relief but in reality they exaggerate the mental illness that is lying dormant just under the suftace.

    • @jonnylumberjack6223
      @jonnylumberjack6223 3 роки тому +14

      @@PhoenixProdLLC Well, speak for yourself, such a notion never crossed my mind. Addiction can run in families so I'm thinking it's far more likely to be genetic. Or societal, I imagine that can make a difference too. I'm lucky and I've been (kind of) careful but I would be interested to know if there was more to it. Also, addiction is an illness, nothing to do with morality or intellect. But you fill your judgy boots, clearly you feel the need.

    • @jonnylumberjack6223
      @jonnylumberjack6223 3 роки тому +7

      @@aa.4639 I think to a large degree you are right. Like everything else though, I don't think it's that clear cut. Nothing about the human brain ever is though, so the questions will remain I fear.

    • @aa.4639
      @aa.4639 3 роки тому +9

      @@jonnylumberjack6223 There has been a lot of research done on this subject. There is a clear corelation between childhood neglect and abuse and addiction. People deprived of love and positive emotions in childhood fall faster in to addiction and have a harder time breaking free. As these substances are the only thing in their life that makes them feel genuine pleasure, calmnes and warmth. ( emotions asociated with a mothers love etc.)