17 Geniuses Who Used Drugs To Inspire Their Best Work
people who needed to say “hello” to their little friend in order to function on a genius level.
Published 9 years ago in Wow
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Alejandro Jodorowsky: LSD. Jodorowsky explains he only took LSD one time, which was in between the directors two biggest films: El Topo and The Holy Mountain. The director states that he brought a guru with him to administer the drug: “He gave me LSD, and I was initiated for eight hours. And this was an incredible resource; directed by the guru, I discovered images of my mind there, I discovered treasures inside me. That was a big revolution, I must say.”
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The Beatles: LSD. After experiencing LSD, George Harrison and John Lennon said that they just couldn’t relate to Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr anymore because they had never taken the drug. The clean cut boys from Liverpool all eventually got a ticket to ride the LSD train and they also credited the drug for allowing their creativity to evolve into the late 60s and beyond.
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Ralph Steadman: LSD. Steadman was the illustrator behind the works of Hunter S. Thompson. Anyone who knows anything about Thompson probably realizes that if you were around him long enough, you were going to take drugs. Steadman’s first experience with drug use came after he asked the famous Gonzo writer for something to battle sea sickness – Thompson gave Steadman LSD.
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Aldous Huxley. The great novelist and screenwriter Aldous Huxley wrote a masterpiece in Brave New World but sought and failed to find continued inspiration from religion. After trying many belief systems, Huxley turned to drugs as a means of cultivating a personal philosophy. During this time period he wrote The Doors of Perception.
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Sigmund Freud: Cocaine. Freud was an advocate of using controlled doses of cocaine regularly. Of the drug, he says: “If all goes well, I will write an essay and I expect it will win its place in therapeutics by the side of morphine and superior to it…I take very small doses of it regularly against depression and with the most brilliant of success.”