Curious minds select the most fascinating podcasts from around the world. Discover hand-piqd audio recommendations on your favorite topics.
piqer for: Health and Sanity Global finds
I was born in 1987 in Bucharest. I studied Psychology and Educational Sciences at the University of Bucharest. For two years I worked in a psychotherapy practice, dealing with gambling addicts. I'm an independent reporter, writing and doing video reportages mostly about social and political issues. I am currently based in Jena.
This essay starts off from the premise that the drugs used by each generation are an indicator of its needs and desires. That they indicate, if you want to put it this way, what’s “wrong” with the people from a certain decade.
In the first part of the article, the author tells about Aldous Huxley’s change of heart when it came to drugs: he thought drugs are a means of political control and despised people using the early 20th century’s drugs du jour, only to try LSD in the 1950s and become infatuated with it, calling it medicine. He even introduced Timothy Leary to LSD. So the author asks himself: “Why are drugs universally despised at one time, then embraced at another?”
To answer that, he takes the reader through a review of different eras and the drugs that accompanied them. Cocaine, for instance, was highly popular at the turn of the 19th century because it represented “resistance to Victorian norms, the abandonment of rigorous civility in favour of an emergent 'anything goes' social libertarianism in the era of the Jugendstil, and the rise of social-democratic politics”. When cocaine made its comeback in the late 1980s, it stood for “the opposite social tendency: iron conformism to the dictates of finance capital and stock-trading, which underscored the resurgence of entrepreneurial selfishness in the Reagan and Thatcher period”.
After going over the 1950s era when housewives became addicted to barbiturates and later discovered LSD, we get to the attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) craze in the 2000s. In those years there was a spike in ADHD diagnoses and Ritalin and Adderall prescription. “Instead of people finding drugs to answer their cultural questions, cultural problems are manufactured to sell pre-existing drugs.”
Finally, the article deals with the drugs used nowadays, the problems they want to solve, and how taking drugs is changing the notion of “self”. To give you a hint, people have a tendency towards productivity-enhancing drugs.
The last bit about creating and consuming drugs that would permanently take us out of ourselves was the most disturbing. It's the drug equivalent of the virtual reality nightmare scenarios of being jacked in 24/7. Are there drugs or experiences that are close to doing this now? As someone on antidepressants much against my preference, I don't feel being on them changes who I am and neither does binaural beats, which I also use in meditation. So what could we be talking about here? What's the next phase of drugs post-productivity?