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A Nation of Mystics

Page 34

by Pamela Johnson


  Bob’s old lady in Laguna Beach

  Kali

  See Lisa

  Kathy (Kathleen) Murray

  Student at Louisiana State University Baton Rouge, political activist

  Kevin

  Artist and dealer in Haight-Ashbury, Christian and Bob’s contact

  Krishna

  Ashram manager and student of Hindu religion

  Lama Loden Rinpoche

  Christian’s teacher, Tibetan monk

  Lance Bormann

  One of the new “drug attorneys,” former Free Speech Movement activist

  Larry

  Kathy’s hitching partner from the Haight and love interest, dealer in Tucson, Carolyn’s old man

  Lisa

  Dropout philosophy major at the University of California, Berkeley; housemate with Christian and Matt; later, a devotee at the Ananda Shiva Ashram, renamed Kali

  Mana

  Shaman of the Ecuadorian Amazon, adopts Jerry as his son during the Ecuador expedition

  Marcie (Marcelle) Arceneaux

  Kathy’s best friend and college dorm mate at LSU, political activist, Richard’s old lady in the Haight-Ashbury

  Mark

  Richard’s Berkeley LSD crystal connection

  Matt

  Christian’s Berkeley roommate and business partner

  Max Wilkes

  Student, member of the ROTC at Berkeley, superior officer of Myles Corbet

  Melvin Sparks

  Bail bondsman working closely with Lance Bormann

  Merlin

  Richard and Alex’s runner, Greta’s old man, dealer in the Haight-Ashbury

  Michelle

  David’s old lady in the Haight-Ashbury

  Mick Crogan

  Dealer in Berkeley

  Miguel

  Larry and Jose’s housemate in the Tucson commune, Rosie’s old man

  Myles Corbet

  Botany student at the University of California, Berkeley; leader of the expedition to Gabon, Africa

  Nareesh

  Christian’s boyhood friend and brother in spirit

  Nunes, Colonel

  Regular army superior, ROTC, at the University of California, Berkeley

  Padmananda

  Disciple of the Master of the Ananda Shiva Ashram

  “Phil”

  See Ted “Phil” Phillips, Agent

  Philip Corbet

  Myles’s father; head of biology department, UC Berkeley

  Phillips, Agent Ted “Phil”

  Northern California Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement, undercover agent

  Richard Harrison

  Dealer in the Haight-Ashbury, Marcie’s old man

  Roger

  Guru of the Family of Man

  Rosie

  Miguel’s old lady in Tucson

  Tony

  Manager of Electric Reason

  Wade Tillich

  Informant arrested by Supervisor Bremer, Alison’s old man

  Wilson, Agent Ed

  Northern California Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement, Bremer’s protégé

  APPENDIX B

  GLOSSARY

  A

  Acid: n. Lysergic acid diethylamide, a psychedelic drug altering thinking processes, producing visuals and synesthesia and documented spiritual experiences; a key sacrament in the 1960s counterculture; used currently by medical researchers in understanding death and dying and anxiety disorders

  Ayahuasca: n. A hallucinogenic substance containing DMT (dimethyltryptamine), derived from vines found in the jungles of South America

  B

  Baez, Joan: American singer, musician, songwriter, and activist involved in the civil rights, pacifist, and human rights movements from the 1960s to the present

  Big Brother and the Holding Company: American rock band formed in the 1960s, associated with the psychedelic music scene

  Bodhisattva: n. An enlightened being; used by some New Age proponents to define one on the path to enlightenment with the intention of aiding others to Buddha consciousness

  Brahmacharya: n. One who accepts celibacy in the practice of attaining higher consciousness through meditation of the sacred rather than the sensual

  Brahman: n. The highest form of Ultimate Reality in Hindu religion; all Hindu gods are a manifestation of this Ultimate Reality, and man’s purpose is to unite with this Reality through self-awareness

  Brahmin: n. One of the upper classes of the old Hindu caste system known for scholarly study and teaching

  Brotherhood of Eternal Love: n. A loose-knit confederation of men and women who believe that higher consciousness can be achieved through the psychedelic experience; originally begun in the Laguna Beach area of Southern California by John Griggs

  Bukhara: n. A distinctive rug from Central Asia made from wool, framed with a rectangular border and with geometrical designs in the center

  C

  Cap: n. A dose of a drug in a gelatin capsule; v. to place a drug into a gelatin capsule by stuffing one half of the capsule with powder and joining the two sides of the capsule together

  Chakra: n. Any one of the seven major energy centers in the body in Hindu and Buddhist religions

  Charas: n. Hand-rolled hashish from the Himalayan foothills of India, dark in color

  Cocaine (coke): n. A naturally derived central nervous system stimulant produced from a plant grown in the Andean region of South America

  Cop: n. A police officer; v. to buy from someone

  Curtis, Edward M.: An ethnologist who wrote about and photographed Native Americas; born 1868, died 1952

  D

  DMT (dimethyltryptamine): n. An intense hallucinogenic drug with psychedelic properties lasting from fifteen minutes to a half hour; the main hallucinogenic property of the ayahuasca vine.

  Drop: v. To take LSD, to release a batch of LSD into the market

  E

  Ergotamine tartrate: n. An alkaloid of the ergot fungus from which lysergic acid can be made, used medically as a vascular constrictor and migraine medicine

  F

  Fit: n. Short for outfit; a small box containing a needle, syringe, bulb, string, and cotton—paraphernalia for injecting a crystal drug

  Freak: n. A hippie, a political activist for peace in the 1960s

  Front: v. To loan products for sale; after the sale, the established price of the goods is returned to the lender, any further profit belonging to the seller

  G

  Geshe: n. A Tibetan monk or lama with a high degree in the study of Buddhism

  Graham, Bill: American rock music concert promoter, active in San Francisco in the 1960s

  Grateful Dead, the: American rock band formed in the 1960s, associated with the psychedelic music scene

  Grass: n. Marijuana, one of the various species of Cannabis: Cannabis sativa, Cannabis indica, or Cannabis ruderalis

  Groovy: adj. Sixties colloquialism; really outstanding; cool

  H

  Hashish (hash): n. A product composed of compressed Cannabis resin

  Head: n. A person who experiments with expanding consciousness through pharmaceuticals

  Hep: n. Short for hepatitis, generally contracted in the underground by using contaminated needles for intravenous drug use

  Hippie: n. One of the flower children of the 1960s, believing in the principles of peace and love, especially those of the Haight-Ashbury district in San Francisco

  Hit: n. A single dose of a drug; v. to deliver a dose of a drug

  Hold: v. To be in possession of a drug

  House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC): n. A governmental committee whose purpose was to investigate a citizen of the United States for engagement in any activity considered Communist in nature

  I

  Iboga: See Tabernanthe iboga

  J

  Joint: n. A marijuana cigarette

  K

  Kachina: n. A masked dancer that embodies a spirit in Hopi religion; a small carved figure representing a masked dan
cer

  Kali: n. The Hindu goddess of destruction

  Karma: n. A complicated system of cause and effect that occurs on different levels of existence; in this world, the generally immediate results from personal choices, and in the next, the result of the accumulated actions that produce a destination of rebirth or afterlife.

  Key, kilo: n. Short for kilogram

  Kesey, Ken: American author involved in the counterculture of the 1960s

  L

  Leary, Timothy: Often called High Priest of the psychedelic movement in the 1960s and 1970s, a former professor of psychology at Harvard University who experimented with LSD and psilocybin with his students; coined the phase “Turn on, tune in, drop out” in the sixties; invited to live with the Brotherhood of Eternal Love in Laguna Beach, California

  Lid: n. An ounce of marijuana

  Lysergic acid: n. A crystalline alkaloid that is a major constituent of ergot

  M

  Man, the: n. The authorities, police, narcotics agents

  Mandala: n. A design of concentric circular patterns emanating from a central core

  Merry Pranksters: A communal group associated with Ken Kesey, known for promoting the use of psychedelic drugs

  Mic: n. Short for microgram, usually relating to dosages of LSD

  Mudra: n. A gesture or position of the hands, generally used in meditation or prayer

  N

  Namaste: n. A salutation among Hindus of South Asia; lit. “I bow to the divine within you”

  Needle track: n. Small puncture wound that indicates the use of intravenous drugs

  O

  Old lady: n. A female partner and lover in common law living or marriage

  Old man: n. A male partner and lover in common law living or marriage

  Om: n. Onomatopoeic sound used in meditation that imitates the sound of the universe vibrating

  P

  PCP (phencyclidine): n. A powerful anesthetic used primarily on animals, accepted into the psychedelic scene of the 1960s as a sacrament until its adverse effects became apparent

  Pig: n. Pejorative slang for police officer

  Pink Wedge: n. A combination tablet of LSD and STP popular in 1967

  Purple Haze: n. The name of a type of acid produced by Owsley Stanley popular in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco in 1967, during the Summer of Love

  R

  Roach: n. The short remains of a marijuana cigarette, often relit to smoke and held in a roach clip

  Roach clip: n. Any metal holder that can hold a roach so that the fingers are not burned

  Rolling box: n. A shallow box that allows for marijuana leaves to be separated from seeds by tipping the box so that the seeds roll to one side

  Rubin, Jerry: Social activist and antiwar leader of the 1960s and 1970s who began the Vietnam Day Committee in Berkeley in 1965

  Runner: n. A lieutenant who works for a dealer

  S

  Sadhu: n. An ascetic Hindu holy man

  Satsang: n. A religious meeting in which practitioners listen to teachings on a religious, moral, or spiritual principle

  Savio, Mario: One of the most well known leaders of the Free Speech Movement at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1965

  Seva: n. Selfless service, work offered to God in Indian religions, often ordinary work that needs to be done but done with awareness and positive intention

  Stanley, Owsley: LSD manufacturer, especially between 1965 and 1967, who worked as sound manager for the Grateful Dead, closely connected to the author Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters

  Stash: n. A supply of drugs, usually hidden, for personal or business use

  STP: n. 2,5-Dimethoxy-4-methylamphetamine, a psychedelic amphetamine

  Summer of Love: n. The summer of 1967, when approximately 100,000 people converged on the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco as part of the hippie movement

  T

  Tab: n. A pharmaceutical tablet; v. to create tablets, usually by machine

  Tabernanthe iboga: n. A West African perennial rainforest shrub used as a hallucinogen in a sacred ritual by the Bwiti people of Gabon, currently used in Western medicine to treat addiction to opiates

  Tantra: n. A complex system of prayer, meditation, and ritual that fosters union with the Divine Mother, eliminating the ego and furthering the path to enlightenment; influential in Buddhism, particularly in Tibet

  Thangka: n. A Buddhist religious painting on a scroll that can be easily rolled for storage and travel

  Toke: v. To inhale while smoking, usually marijuana

  Trip: n. A psychedelic experience brought on by drug use; v. to use a psychoactive drug

  V

  Vietnam Day Committee: n. A coalition of student groups, labor, and antiwar activists, organized in Berkeley in 1965 by Jerry Rubin

  W

  Weed: n. Marijuana, any species of Cannabis

  White Lightning: n. Very good LSD made by Owsley Stanley in 1966 and 1967

  A PREVIEW of

  A NATION OF MYSTICS

  __________

  BOOK II

  TRIBES

  KATHLEEN MURRAY

  TUCSON, ARIZONA, TO BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA

  JANUARY 1968

  Even in the cold of January, Kathleen Murray loved the desert—the high peaks that rose roughly from dry, rolling hills; tall saguaro cactuses, green sentries by day and silver monoliths in moonlight; the quick rabbits with white tails; flocks of bright red cardinals; anxious roadrunners dashing across tar and gravel roads; the crying howl of the coyotes piercing the night.

  And then there was the hawk, the bird that called to her spirit, because in the bird she saw grace, perfection of form, and freedom as it circled high above the earth.

  She was beginning to understand that she liked many places—the beautiful, old city of New Orleans, where she’d been born and raised; cool summers in the San Francisco Bay; the bookstores of Berkeley; the winter green hills of Marin County; the rough coastline of Big Sur; and tonight, the desert south of Tucson, with its star-filled sky so large that she was once again a tiny speck in the universe, overwhelmed by the vastness of creation and humbled by the tiny thread she wove in this life.

  As she walked the moonlit road in solitude, the desert was cold, but she was in no hurry to return to the warmth of the fireplace. This was a new year—1968—and with the turning of the earth, there were infinite new possibilities. The original plan had been to see how California could mobilize thousands to political action, and Kathy had thought to take those ideas back with her to LSU. Instead, she had discovered a new kind of politics, one of spiritual revolution through psychedelic awareness. For the moment, she was deeply involved in bringing kilos of marijuana to the San Francisco Bay from the old barn on this ranch near the Mexican border.

  Overhead, a shooting star exploded across the sky.

  A good omen, she thought.

  In the first week of January, she’d bought a Volkswagen van in California. Running suitcases of keys through the San Francisco airport was becoming risky. That she’d managed this long without getting caught was a miracle. With wheels, she could drive on a regular basis without attracting attention—and she could carry a larger load. Like the hawk she admired, she was between worlds—a part of the Fairfax house in Marin County and also a part of the Tucson ranch and its family. The road between the two was fairly straight, from Richard and Alex to Larry and Jose.

  In the morning, she would leave this place and begin a new journey on her own. The thought of leaving Larry after spending months with him through a hepatitis illness and hospitalization, holidays, and trips of discovery, had caused her to consider long and hard. Once she was gone, the threesome with Carolyn would dissolve. Larry would turn to Carolyn to live in the day to day that ranch life demanded, while she would be on the road, facing a new horizon each morning. When Larry had asked her to stay and become his partner, saying again that he’d work something out with Carolyn, she’d learned someth
ing else about herself. She wanted to remain the hawk—graceful, in balance with air and earth, and free.

  “Kathy,” Larry called to her the next morning, “come out to the barn and take a look at the van. We’ve finished loading up.”

  “What do you think?” Jose asked. “I opened the panels in the rear, stuffed them with kilos, then repaneled. No one looking in here will be able to tell you’re carrying.”

  “Is there anything I can do about the smell?”

  Jose shook his head. “Not a whole lot. We’re going to have to come up with a better way to wrap the product. Someone was telling me about something called shrink wrapping.”

  “It’ll be all right,” Larry told her. “We bought the car secondhand in Berkeley for the license plates. When you get to the California Agricultural Inspection Station at the state border, just get in the free lane of local returning traffic.”

  “I couldn’t get everything in the panels,” Jose said. “Some of it had to go into these two trunks, but we’ve made you a bed to cover them. You’re going to want to sleep sometime anyway. It’s at least a good two-day ride.”

  “How many are here?” she asked.

  “Two hundred. All primo weed.” Larry put his arm around her shoulders. “You know what you need? A partner. Someone to help with the driving.”

 

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