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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: OPED: Confessions Of A Middle-Aged Ecstasy Eater
Title:UK: OPED: Confessions Of A Middle-Aged Ecstasy Eater
Published On:2001-07-14
Source:Guardian, The (UK)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 14:02:33
CONFESSIONS OF A MIDDLE-AGED ECSTASY EATER

He's A 50-Year-Old Writer, Buys Drugs From His Son And Says They Give Him
The Best Experiences Of His Life.

I am not Thomas de Quincey (or Coleridge, Baudelaire, Cocteau, Huxley, Paul
Bowles, Carlos Castenada, William Burroughs, Ken Kesey or Hunter Thompson),
and the harm that revealing my identity would inflict, not only upon my
professional reputation but upon those whom I love, is not commensurate
with the likely benefits.

I am fast approaching my 50th year, and most of my adult life has been
lived comfortably on the right side of the law, first as a journalist, then
as a novelist, prose-poet and essayist.

I am at present what I so long ago explicitly aspired to become - a man of
letters.

Nothing surpasses the life of the mind. And so, if eating Ecstasy be
chiefly a sensual, and so a mindless pleasure, and if I have indulged in it
to excess, no less true is that I have struggled to understand my habit, if
not yet with the religious zeal required properly to get shed of it. But
then, perhaps I do not wish to get shed of it.

I have occasionally been asked how I became a regular Ecstasy-eater. I was
aware of its reputation as the "love drug", had heard it described as a
"four-hour, full-body orgasm" and I found this intriguing, alluring and
worthy of further investigation.

Which is odd, because ordinarily I would not have condescended to pay it
the slightest heed. Even at university, the high times of those heady years
- - in my case 1969 to 1976 - I was not a user, chronic, casual or otherwise.
Despite an environment in which smoking grass and dropping acid (if not yet
snorting coke or shooting smack) was not only benignly accepted, but
benevolently smiled upon, I deliberately chose not to indulge. Everyone -
including my friends, and most of my professors - was doing it. Except me.
This had nothing to do with feelings of superiority or intolerance. It had
to do solely with fear. Not only was I afraid of "fucking with my mind", I
was petrified of irreparably fucking it up. I steadfastly refused to buy
into the druggie/head trip/ stoner agitprop of the day. Reading The
Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test or Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas, listening to
Hendrix or the Doors, Cream or the Airplane was more than enough for me.
Not that I was, despite my midwestern Calvinist upbringing, narrow-minded
or uncurious, nor was I unhip. Simply, I was scared.

Small wonder, then, how often those select few with knowledge of my current
habit have remarked upon my being the "least likely person in the world" to
have fallen prey to it.

Well, yes. And likewise, no. For I believe that my coming to Ecstasy goes
further than mere thrill-seeking. I believe it goes to the centre of my
life at the time. It was a period of personal devastation. It began with my
only child, a son - he was then my best friend, from time to time still is
- - and I did not see it coming and it culminated in Ecstasy, and to that I
see no end. He was beautiful and sensitive and extraordinarily talented,
talented enough that at 13 his poetry had won the notice of university
professors and New York book editors alike.

So when he undertook to destroy himself, he took his mother and father with
him. That was not, nor is it, his fault.

He was 13 and had neither the capacity nor context to grasp what he was
doing. He attempted suicide.

He ran away, serially.

He purchased a handgun from a schoolfriend. He stole, sometimes from
stores, more often from his parents, typically in the middle of the night.

He got drunk, and when he got drunk he got violent.

He verbally and physically abused his mother.

He attempted to set her hair on fire. He dismantled furniture, broke china,
smashed crystal and, unprovoked, punched out windows and kicked in walls.

He shredded his wardrobe with scissors, every stitch of his clothing, and
when he had finished, started in on his mother's. He trashed his bedroom
and graffitied what remained with every racial and sexual epithet
imaginable. He slept on the floor amid rotting food, curdled milk, the
mouse droppings that appeared in their wake and a rubble of plaster,
drywall and broken glass.

He refused to bathe.

He defecated in the yard and urinated in Coke cans which he deployed about
his bedroom in pentagrams. He carved his arms with the filed-down ends of
paper clips.

He discovered marijuana, then cocaine. Then PCP. Then "Special K" (an
animal tranquilliser he called "cat food"). He disappeared for days at a
time, often into New York City where he slept in storefronts and abandoned
buildings and on park benches. He was consigned first to lockdown in a
private psychiatric ward, then to a special school out of state.

He was counselled. He was diagnosed with a variety of acronyms: AD, ADD,
ODD, ICD, possible BP. He was prescribed medication. He was now dealing as
well as using drugs. His lifestyle was redolent of a vampire's, for he
lived upside-down, sleeping all day, drugging all night.

Eventually, in the course of one five-day spree, he totalled two
automobiles, one his father's, pulverising his ankle so badly in the
process that it required 26 staples, 10 screws and two stainless-steel
plates to reconstruct. I would not swear to the precise chronology of any
of this, but to this I would: he strewed wreckage every where.

In the meantime his parents' marriage, all 20 years of it, was collapsing.
My wife was and remains a beautiful, caring, generous, gifted woman.

I would not hesitate to give my life for her, and though we have not lived
together for years, I admire and, on some level, love her still, as I know
I always shall.

But sometimes that is not enough.

The marriage had its long-standing problems, its rifts and fractures, and
when it came under siege and then assault, the stress was too much. We lost
our way, then ran aground, and then, at last, we broke.

I left. Not straight away - the break was anything but clean; it was
tortured - and I never went far. I was back in and back out for years.

I was at a loss as to how I could properly leave and unsure if I wished to
find out. Eventually I found a place just bleak enough to mirror the way I
felt, and I felt dreadful, wretched, unsalvageable. I stopped shaving,
bathing, sleeping.

In time, I stopped eating. (Over one three-month period I shed 40 lb.) The
place was a single, windowless room scarcely larger than a tool shed, a
cellar space attached to the back of an abandoned garage, and I wallowed in
it, in its cobwebs and filth - alone. I began to disintegrate. I continued
to write, frantically, because writing was the only way I knew to stay
afloat, though looking back I cannot say whether I was writing myself out
of what I sensed was an approaching madness, or writing myself more deeply
into it.

The nightmares arrived on cue. Not images of hell and its hounds but
waterfalls and rivers of words.

No images, no meanings, just words, disconnected, decontextualised,
foaming, alone.

I was haemorrhaging rhymes and the metre of verbs, and each morning, 4am,
5am, I awoke unbuoyed and drenched to the bone.

Somehow, I completed the 500-page draft of a novel about, of all things,
Lizzie Borden, but when I submitted it to my agent he deemed it "one of the
most brilliant pieces of insanity" he had ever read, declared it utterly
unmarketable, and declined to take it on. We parted company, on the heels
of which my editor quit his job at a prominent New York publishing house.

My marriage was dead - though I still insisted upon thinking of it as
merely semi-comatose - my son still very much alive, I was agentless,
editorless, apparently unpublishable, was living like a tramp and a
recluse, my income close to nil, and I was going mad.

And then the unthinkable happened, or rather, two things happened.

I met someone, a woman, and while I in my recalcitrant fashion followed up
on that meeting so that she might eventually save me (as she eventually
did), my son was becoming what is called, in the parlance, a "raver". And
he seemed for the first time in years - he was 17 by then - happy. Not
giddy or euphoric, but content, at peace with himself.

I do not mean to invoke images of Zen and Buddha - my son is roughly as
Zen-like as Eminem - but the transformation was as striking as it was palpable.

It seemed so definitive that I could not help asking him about it, and when
I did, he smiled and said simply, "Uh-huh. I am." And when I asked him why,
what had happened, he smiled again and said, "Aw, you wouldn't understand.
But it's my whole life now. I know why I'm alive."

I remember my response.

And perhaps had I responded in some other way or simply not responded at
all, what was about to happen would never have happened. What I said was,
"Congratulations. I'm happy for you. Really. I wish I did." And so he
turned to me and said, "Seriously?" And when I answered not only in the
affirmative, but the declarative, he told me a story and made me an offer,
and so was hatched yet another aspect of our relationship, an aspect that
is as wholly illicit as it is morally unsavoury, and one that continues to
this day.

We both know it is wrong, the arrangement, the dilemma it poses, wrong in
the most intimate and unholy of ways, as we both know that neither of us
cares enough about the fact to do anything about it. It is a shared shame
now, and it has become, like the abiding commonness of our blood, a large
and integral part of what bonds us. My son supplies me with drugs, with
Ecstasy.

And so the first time I ate E - or X, or EX, or XTC, or MDMA (methylened
ioxymethamphetamine) - it was having given my son permission to sell it to
me. I became his customer, a buyer, a reliable and steady client, the
lowest link on the food chain of the multibillion-dollar commerce that
proceeds unabated every day, every hour, in every large city and small town
in every state in this union, in what is called by those paid to "war"
against them "controlled substances".

I find it ironic.

Because I cannot think of a single commodity in our country that is less
controlled than such substances, nor a single "war" that is as pathetically
futile, vaingloriously chimeric and long-ago-lost as is this one. Wrestle
as you will, you cannot reform or arrest human appetite.

Ecstasy is as illegal as heroin.

This is just the sort of run-amok governmental lunacy guaranteed to ensure
that those like myself - and more importantly, our children - will write
off that same government and those who enforce its drug laws as out of
touch, coercive, morally bankrupt and, yes, un-American. Because America is
not, or did not used to be, about throwing 16-year-old kids in jail for -
all in the spirit of free-market capitalism and entrepreneurial enterprise
- - home-growing a little cannabis, even as the rest of us chain-smoke our
Camels, sip our Absoluts with a twist, and devour our Prozac.

Visit a rehab centre some time. You will learn two things inside that first
hour. One, that there are people in this world who are more susceptible to
addiction than others; there always have been, always will be, addicts.

And two, that the "gateway" argument is as simplistic as it is spurious.

We are not losing our kids to drugs.

We have lost our kids because we haven't the time, inclination, strength of
character or political will to do the right thing in their name: to
eliminate the black market that so mercilessly exploits them - and the
runaway violence it spawns - by legalising, taxing and regulating the trade.

I pretend to no monopoly of wisdom on the subject.

But I know something of Ecstasy. And what I know I know because I have
eaten and continue to eat so much of it. I am an experienced eater of E and
it is a fact of which I am neither proud nor mortified.

So here, in a word, a most sober, solemn, even a sombre word, is what I
know: yum. Ecstasy is delicious.

Or, put it another way, Ecstasy is delicious and I recommend highly, loudly
and long that everyone whose health does not contraindicate or preclude its
ingestion, ought to ingest it. Go out, I admonish you, all of you, hit the
streets or collar that neighbourhood kid, drum up a contact, do a deal,
repair thyselves home, soften the lights, put on some music - the best
stuff - pour yourself a pitcher of ice water, perhaps two, keep a tin of
Altoids handy, as well as a tube of Vicks inhalant and a couple of packs of
mineral ice, make yourself comfortable, lie back and... swallow.

An hour from now, perhaps less, you are going to experience something that
shall forever change such time as remains to you on this earth.

You are going to experience something that is, every second of it,
delicious - deliciously, positively, unprecedentedly w-o-n-d-e-r-f-u-l.

It is your self-anointing, and I envy you that first time. So relish it,
savour it, languish it, treasure it, that sacred four hours.

You have just swallowed wonder, ambrosia and mead, you have partaken of
lustre and grace.

Just make certain that before you swallow you know that the pill is
authentic, and not some rip-off. Do that, and the rest is a piece of cake,
a piece of cake that is like no other you have ever tasted. Think of the
best day of your life, or recall the sweetest, purest, most special thing
along the way - person, place, moment, experience, accomplishment. Now
multiply that tenfold.

That does not begin to describe how impossibly delicious E is.

I am not unaware of how redolent this is of Timothy Leary's often loopy
proselytising for LSD, and its "quasi-religious" associations, but this has
nothing to do with that. Ecstasy is a clarifier.

It enables one to see, feel and think, if not more deeply, then certainly
more clearly. The high subsides, but the lucidity lingers.

In that sense, not to mention in its chemical composition, it is quite the
opposite of LSD.

Ecstasy is a clarifier, but it is a personal clarifier.

It is not - despite all the peace/love/unity/respect hype surrounding it -
a universal one. Its lessons may be universal in their implications, but
they are intended to be applied to oneself.

Which is not to say that the drug does not have its social dimensions or
that one ought not to do E in the company of others.

Indeed I would not find it congenial to do, nor have I ever done it, alone.
(As close as I ever came was on an unpeopled, night-time sidestreet in
London, and it was raining, and it was one of the memorable experiences of
my life - neon, glistening, menthol, veneered in layer after thickening
layer of thick honey.

Lovely streets, London, and lovely, so lovely, its rain.)

But better by far to do it with those one loves, and best of all with one's
one-and-only lover.

And if what one takes in the broadest sense is all about human connection
and empathy - E has proven highly effective in certain kinds of couples
therapy - it is all the more about connecting with and feeling empathy for
oneself.

It is, contrary to its image as the current drug of choice among teenagers
and the prevalence of its use at their "raves", the most intimate of drugs.

I did it my first time with the woman who saved me. It was her first time
as well. We were, as zero hour approached, visibly apprehensive, an
attitude, I think, that is only sane. We had cleared our schedules,
switched off the phones, and we were in her home, just the two of us, in
our bathrobes, in the living room, on the couch.

Van was on the stereo, Astral Weeks, Moondance, Common One, The Best of:
Volume One. A fire was roaring in the fireplace.

The lamp was turned down low. It was mid-evening, and we had ready, as my
son had taken care to instruct us, our pair of tumblers and pitchers of
iced-down spring water.

E increases body temperature and heart rate and elevates blood pressure, so
drinking water - not beer, not liquor - is pro forma as one rolls along.

And one wishes to drink, because E causes dehydration - one of its most
immediate side-effects is a dry mouth.

With much mutually nervous, serio-comic, ceremonial chit-chat, then, we
each popped our pill, swallowed, waited, and - nothing.

We locked eyes. We still were alive.

I think we were only half-amazed. I know we were relieved.

Van was still belting as only Van can. It takes a while for Ecstasy to kick
in - and then the world around you billows open like an eye and you are
lifted and taken - coronaed, crowned, spangled and lantern-lit, your
smiling face flambeaued as by a thousand chandeliers.

One of the most discernible early effects - it happened that first time,
though often it does not - is what I have heard described as "fluttery"
vision. This phenomenon is as close to an hallucinatory quality as E
produces, and it is so mild - and weirdly pleasant - that to label it as
such is frankly inaccurate. When it happened to us, we looked at one
another, smiled, and virtually in unison commented on it. Cool. Images
remain intact, they just move a little, as if jagged were a verb, within
the texture of their own lines.

These striations are very unthreatening, and very, well, cool. And then
suddenly Van was singing waaaaay over there, and then waaaaay inside the
very pith of my brain, yet way outside and all around as well. And that
also was. Cool.

What happened next was that everything and all at once, while clearly
remaining itself, was transfigured, transmogrified, a new self, a
simultaneously deeper and higher, older and newer self - smoother and
softer and rounder.

The world was suddenly guilt- and worry- and wrinkle-free, palpably,
beautifully buoyant - visually, texturally, aurally - transcendently right
and glorious and divine.

Whatever beautiful thing one can imagine, it is that much more beautiful on
E. And so we looked at one another and felt one another, with our fingers
and our lips and our tongues, indeed with the whole of our new-found faces,
this plumbing of the new map of our bodies - new softer hair, new smoother
flesh, new pinker, fresher, more fragrant, shimmering, altogether fluffier
genitalia - and we smelled and tasted one another - she smelled of burst
peaches and tasted as the recent salts of pearls - because sense of smell
and taste is no less honed and heightened than the other senses.

We bathed in one another, each of our five senses, 10 in all, because that
commingling is what had taken place, its rhapsody, and humanity, and caress.

And we looked to one another exactly as we felt and smelled and tasted:
rapturous, heavenly, transcendent, numinous, aglow.

She a resplendent, bejewelled goddess, I a radiant god. Later, I got up,
walked to the bathroom - walking on E is no more difficult than walking on
water or floating on air - and looked in the mirror.

I wanted to see what I looked like - I am just vain enough that the thought
occurred to me even in the midst of the roll - though I already had seen
reflected in my lover's eyes that I looked sufficiently, there is no other
word, gorgeous. (If I looked half as gorgeous as she did to me I reckoned I
was in for a treat.) And the person I saw looking back at me was gorgeous,
but gorgeous in a way that floored almost as much as it thrilled me.

Here, now, as I stared grinning in astonishment, I looked 28. And not some
50-year-old version of myself at 28, but me the way I was back then. I
moved closer, peered harder.

I could scarcely believe it. I had recaptured myself.

Dorian Gray. Fountain of Youth. Spontaneous regeneration. Somehow I had
been restored, and I felt what I can only describe as an all-consuming
nostalgia for the present.

And then, after helping each other off with our bathrobes, our old, nubby,
cotton-twill bathrobes - suddenly spun of the finest cashmere and angelica,
these clouds of talcum and down - we embraced, and kissed, and she
whispered in my ear: "We've found fucking gold."

It distinctly was not an out-of-the-body experience, as it was not a
mind-expanding one. It distinctly was a further-into-the-body experience,
and a mind-clarifying one. An excavation of the self. An exhumation of the
other.

And so we did. For four hours we dug, sinking further into each other, as
likewise into ourselves, and eventually, after four hours of mutually
synchronised digging, that felt exactly like 40 minutes, we found it. Only
it wasn't gold. It was something far better.

It was sex, the very EX in sex- and the climb and climax of sex- as
revelation. And as soul.

So maybe Ecstasy does have something to do with religion, although the word
spirit seems to me a more felicitous fit, because the peace one feels, and
the insights one gains - epiphanies may be a better word - are no less than
oceanic.

You know, that you contain oceans and that those oceans are filled with
beauty and grace and light and love and that they are yours to share as it
may please and delight you. But there is a cost and that cost is high. It
is as expensive as it is extravagant. The simple truth is, when you eat
Ecstasy, you are deliberately messing with your mind, or more accurately
your brain, or more accurately still your brain chemistry.

You are releasing, in a rush, as a deluge - and that rush is unnatural in
the sense that had God intended you to experience it, it would not require
a flock of white-coated "cookers" in a clandestine laboratory somewhere in
Holland or Israel or France to design and customise a pill for you to do
so, nor would the delivery and distribution of those pills so lavishly
profit the Mob - you are, as I say, triggering a veritable tsunami of
serotonin, the human body's pleasure juice, that in turn floods in the most
sensory, sentient way your consciousness, which in turn turns everything
"gold", or rather, golden.

And in the wake of that rush - not the day after perhaps, when you are
still basking, deliciously exhausted in its afterglow but the day after
that, or the next, or the next, what I have heard described as "Black
Tuesday" - you run the risk not only of emotionally crashing, but of
feeling so rawly depleted, that you are tempted to pledge: "I have never
felt this awful in my life, as empty, hollowed, flat, so soulless and lost
to myself, so amputated, so emotionally exsanguinated, and I shall never,
not ever, do this again." And also, "Whatever was I thinking?"

My advice, for what it is worth: wait a minimum of four weeks, the time
purportedly required for one's serotonin to refill its reservoir and your
thoughts and feelings to sort themselves through and get up and running
again, before repeating the performance. Do it more often than that, get
too greedy, and the upshot is "E-tardism" - a trimming down, clipping-off
and curbing of the drug's effects, not to mention possible long-term damage
to the serotonergic nerve grid of the brain, damage of the sort that may
leave you so addled, you will find it not only a full-time challenge to
control your own drool, but to recall that words are composed of letters
and that each represents an actual sound, one intended to be pronounced aloud.

So: moderation in all things, even things that are excessively restorative,
for on occasion, cures do kill.

But here is the Catch-22 which must inevitably be grappled with. What one
thinks - if one stops to think about it - is precisely this: "What is a
mind, if not something to be messed with? What is consciousness, if not a
state to be altered?" If it helps to substitute for the phrase "messed
with" the word "clarified" or "purified" or "alchemised" or "beautified" or
"beatified" then perhaps my meaning is taken.

A mind is a terrible thing to waste, and there is much being wasted when
one deliberately chooses not to explore the ecstasy of its deeper horizons.

Perhaps there are those who feel that they are blessed with a sufficiency
of ecstasy in their daily lives.

Perhaps there are those who feel that such ecstasy, because it is
"unnatural", induced artificially, chemically, "under the influence",
cannot possibly be "existentially authentic", and must therefore be false,
a fraud.

Perhaps there are those who suspect that the disparity is too great, that
having experienced such ecstasy, they will find it too daunting to endure
the rigours and asperities of a mundane, often overwhelmingly corrupt and
ugly world.

Perhaps there are those who feel that such ecstasy cannot be reconciled
with their religious, political, philosophical or domestic agendas, that it
threatens or violates the very essence of that in which they are so wholly
invested.

Perhaps there are those who are reluctant to risk engaging in what our
culture defines as socially unacceptable, even legally trangressive behaviour.

Perhaps there are those who are afraid of footing the physical and
emotional toll, or of becoming psychologically addicted.

And perhaps there are those who simply, unapologetically, are flat-out scared.

Scared of beauty.

And of bliss.

There are such people, and they have every right to their feelings and
beliefs. I know, because I was, for most of my life, one of them.

I am not one of them any more. I am not one of anything.

I am, trite as it may sound, simply me, and here lately, that is more than
enough.

It is plenty.

And there is something else, a secret: there are times, once a month,
sometimes more or less, when the truth of that makes me, well, ecstatic.

My son? He is 19 now, and in his spare time - having some months ago kicked
the Ecstasy habit himself - he spins mixes at raves, and this fall he is
entering college, quite a reputable college, as a psychology major. And he
is writing poetry again.

More brilliant than ever. Minor triumphs, perhaps.

Still, it does make one wonder.

Would he have made it back intact without E? Would he have arrived at that
which all of us deserve and so few manage to find, his chance for happiness?

And it makes one wonder, too, about what they say: better living through
chemistry.

ABC of XTC Sarah Boseley, health editor Over 80 deaths in the UK have been
directly attributed to Ecstasy, usually from heatstroke, over-hydration
after drinking water, or heart failure, rather than immediate toxicity of
the drug. Recent studies have suggested, however, that Es may be doing
damage to brain cells of all users, permanently affecting parts related to
thought and memory.

MDMA (3, 4 methylenedioxymethamphetamine) is a synthetic drug which has the
stimulant properties of amphetamines. Brain imaging shows that it affects
neurons that use the chemical serotonin to communicate with other neurons.

The serotonin system plays a big part in regulating moods, aggression,
sexual activity, sleep and sensitivity to pain.

Physical side-effects include muscle tension, involuntary teeth clenching,
nausea, blurred vision, rapid eye move-ment, faintness, and chills or sweating.

Psychological effects can be confusion, anxiety, depression and sleep problems.

Some people need three or four days of sleep to recover.

Long-term effects are not yet certain, but there are increasing fears they
may include chronic depression and memory loss. One study in primates
showed that four days' exposure to MDMA resulted in brain damage that was
still discernible seven years later.

Ecstasy, combined with hyperactive dancing and a hot and humid club
atmosphere, can lead to overheating. A rise in body temperature to above
40C leads to dilated pupils, convulsions, very low blood pressure and
accelerated heart rate and potentially death by respiratory collapse.

At least three deaths have been put down to excessive water drinking to try
to cool down. Ecstasy appears to prevent the kidneys getting rid of fluids,
which are then retained in cells, including those in the brain, forcing the
main organs to shut down.

This piece appears in full in the new issue of Granta magazine,
"Confessions of a Middle- Aged Ecstasy Eater", available now in bookshops
for UKP 8.99 - or free to new Granta subscribers: Guardian readers can
subscribe to Granta for just UKP 24.95 for one year (30% off), and get
"Confessions" free. Details from FreeCall 004 033, or subs@granta.com.
Ecstasy is a class A drug accruing the following penalties for production,
supplying or offering, for possession and for possession with intent to
supply - life, or seven years, or a fine, or a fine and imprisonment.
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