Without
the ability to fully love or be fully loved, so many of us think
that the acquisition of money can bring self-esteem and
happiness. I’ve enjoyed friendship with some exceedingly
wealthy people. If money brought happiness, then each of them
should be ecstatically happy. But I doubt whether any of them is
any happier than any of my less well-to-do friends. Money, it
seems, attracts more envy than empathy. More lust than love.
In 1932 the
practice of psychiatry was little known or respected. The public
seemed to regard it, just as I probably did, with skepticism.
For years I absurdly treated subjects with which I was
unfamiliar, or sports in which I was not proficient, or books
which I should have read but didn’t, with disdain. But by
1956, lacking the foundation of early spiritual training and
suspecting that there was more happiness available than I seemed
able to grasp, I had grown much more tolerant of, and receptive
to, the knowledge of others. Other searchers, other sharers.
Humanitarians in all fields of endeavor. At the age of 53, after
three unsuccessful marriages, either something was wrong with me
or, obviously, with the whole sociological and moralistic
concepts of our civilization.
Now, I believe in caring for my
health; and I trust you do too. Physical health is a product of,
and dependent upon, mental health — one nurtures and nourishes
the other. And so, together with a group of other interested
Californians — doctors, writers, scientists and artists —
and the encouragement of Betsy, who was interested herself, I
underwent a series of controlled experiments with Lysergic Acid,
a hallucinogenic chemical or drug known as LSD 25. Experiment is
perhaps a misleading word; to most people it signifies
patronization and objectivity. For my part I anxiously awaited
their personal benefits that could be derived from the
experiences, and was quite willing to be less than objective.
Any man who experiments with something that cannot benefit
himself, or add to his happiness, and that of his fellow man in
turn, is a fool and a menace to society. I’ve heard that a man
here and there died during LSD25 sessions; but then I’ve heard
that men died during poker games and while watching horse
racing; but that didn’t seem to stop such occupations. Those
men might have died anywhere while doing anything. Men have also
died testing airplanes and parachutes, vaccines and common cold
cures. In attempting to traverse the next step into progress and
knowledge, men have always died. But there is a difference
between the man who knows what he’s about with a high-powered
airplane, and an idiot who puts wings on a bicycle and takes off
from the edge of Niagra Falls.
LSD 25 is a psychic energizer and
the exact opposite in reaction to the addictive drugs and
opiates. Indeed, Seconal, or similar sedative, is usually given
as an antidote, to quell and offset the effects of LSD 25, if
necessary. The action of the chemical releases the subconscious
so that it becomes apparent to yourself. So that you can see
what transpires in the depth of you mind — and what goes on there
you wouldn’t believe, ladies and gentlemen — and learn which
misconceptions, guilts and fears, with their resultant
repressions, inhibitions and insecurities, have formed the
pattern for your past behavior. A successively recurring pattern
since childhood.
The feeling is that of an
unmarshaling of the thoughts as you’ve customarily associated
them. The lessening of conscious control, similar to the mental
process which takes place when we dream. For example, when
you’re asleep and your mind no longer concerned with matters
and activities of the day, your subconscious often brings itself
to your attention by dreaming. With conscious controls relaxed,
those thoughts buried deep inside begin to come to the surface
in the form of dreams. These dreams, since they appear to us in
symbolic guise, are fantasies and, if you will accept the
reasoning, could be classified as hallucinations. Such
fantasies, or hallucinations, are inside every one of us,
waiting to be released, aired and understood. Dreams are really
the emotions that we find ourselves reluctant to examine, think
about, or meditate upon, while conscious.
Under the effect of LSD
25, these dreams or hallucinations, if you wish, are speeded up,
and interpreted, when properly conducted ba a psychiatrically
orientated doctor who sits quietly by, awaiting whatever
communication one cares to make — the revealing of a hidden
memory seen again from an older, more mature viewpoint, or the
dawning of new enlightenment. Then, if the doctor is as skilled
as mine was, he carefully proffers a word or key, that can lead
to the next release, the next step toward fuller understanding.
The shock of each revelation
brings with it an anguish of sadness for what was not known
before in the wasted years of ignorance and, at the same time,
an ecstasy of joy at being freed from the shackles of such
ignorance.
One becomes a battleground of old
and new beliefs. Of nightmares beyond description. I passed
through changing seas of horrifying and happy sights, through a
montage of intense hate and love, a mosaic of past impressions
assembling and reassembling; through terrifying depths of dark
despair replaced by glorious heavenlike religious symbolisms.
Session after session. Week after week.
I learned may things in the quiet
of that small room. I learned to accept the responsibility for
my own actions, and to blame myself and no one else for
circumstances of my own creating. I learned that no one else was
keeping me unhappy but me; that I could whip myself better than
any other guy in the joint.
I learned that all clichés prove
true; which is, of course, the reason for their repetition, even
when the meaning has been forgotten by the constant usage.
I learned that everything is, or
becomes, its own opposite. A theory I can sometimes apply, but
would find difficult to convey.
I learned that my dear parents,
products of their parents, could know no better than they
knew, and began to remember them only ofr the most useful, the
best, the wisest of their teachings. They gave me my life and
body, the promising combination of the two, and my initial
strength; they endowed me with an inquisitive mind. They taught
me to feed myself, to walk, to bathe myself and to clothe
myself; and I shall think of them always with love now, not only
for what the did know but, even, for what the didn’t
know.
For a slow learner, I learned a
great deal — and the result of it all was rebirth. A new
assessment of life and myself in it. An immeasurably beneficial
cleansing of so many needless fears and guilts, and a release of
the tensions that had been the result of them. Not a cleansing
and release of them all, certainly, for that would be the
absolute — the innocence of the newly born baby with an
unformed ego still close to God — and I cannot experience the
absolute until I have unreservedly returned to the comfort of
God.
In life there is no end to
getting well. Perhaps death itself is the end to getting well.
Or, if you prefer to think as I do, the beginning of being well.
I have heard and now believe it
to be so, that drowning men in the last seconds of life relive
the whole of it again; probably in order to cleanse themselves
before meeting the great Maker, just as our religions instruct;
and everyone is accustomed to the phenomenon of elderly people
remembering their childhood with extraordinary clarity, yet
forgetting what went on only yesterday. We call it second
childhood, but it is undoubtedly the same process, undergone at
a slower pace, as that experienced by the drowning man.
LSD 25 is no longer obtainable in
America. Orthodox psychiatrists using the slower customary
methods resisted its usage, and it’s unlikely that it will be
reintroduced unless some brave, venturesome and respected
psychiatrist publicly speaks out in its favor. Meanwhile, the
authorities have banned its use; at least for therapeutic
purpose. Although how men can be authorities on something
they’ve never tried mystifies me. However, in the hands o f
thrill-seekers it could, like whiskey and the automobile, be
exceedingly dangerous. I suppose all new methods, new theories,
new inventions go through the filter of trial and error,
acceptance and rejection. Past the inevitable parade of scoffers
and stone-throwers.
Yes, it takes a long time for
happiness to break through either to the individual or nations.
It will take just as long as people themselves continue to
confound it. You’ll find that nowadays they put you away for
singing and dancing in the street. “Here now, let’s have
none of that happiness, my boy. You cut that out; waking up the
neighbors!” “Those darn neighbors need waking up, I can tell
you, constable!”
I suppose if a healthy youngster
walked along a street in a bathing suit to allow his or her
youthful pores a little more oxygen from the meager amount
obtainable in our smog-infested cities, he or she would be
arrested. “Here now, none of that trying to keep a healthy
body in this city. Go to the beach!” “In which direction ,
officer? This is Kansas City.” Even bare feet and a rare
acquaintance with the earth beneath them would be sufficient to
disassociate you from the association of your embarrassed
associates. Civilization! Oh, brother! And you, too, sister!
I have made over 60 pictures and
lived in Hollywood for more than 30 years. Thirty years spent in
the stimulating company of hard-working, excitable, dedicated,
loving, serious, honest, good people. Casts and crews. I
recognize and respect them. I know their faults and their
insecurities. I hope they know and forgive mine. Thirty years
ago my hair was black and wavy. Today it’s gray and bristly.
But today people in cars, stopped alongside me at a traffic
light, smile at me!
I feel fine. Alone. But fine. My
mother is quite elderly. My wives have divorced me, and I await
a woman with the best qualities of each. I will endow her with
those qualities because they will be in my own point of view.
As a philosopher once said,
“You cannot judge the day until the night.” Since it is for
me evening, or at least teatime, I can now look back and assess
the day. It’s been a glorious adventure up to here — even
the saddest parts — and I look forward to seeing the rest of
the film. Just as I did in 1932 when I sat in that Paramount
Studio office. I took up the pen and wrote for the first time
“Cary Grant.” And that’s who, it seems, I am. Well, as
some profound fellow said, “I’d be a nut to go through all
that again, but I wouldn’t have missed it for anything.” And
that goes for this autobiography.
THE
END
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