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I Love You Alice B.
Toklas: 1968 Peter Sellers movie where
he is a lawyer who falls for a hippie girl who teaches him to mellow out
with the help of some marijuana brownies.
If it feels good do it!: Don't be inhibited, explore what life
has in store for you.
IFIF: International Foundation for Internal Freedom.
Founded by Timothy Leary to promote LSD research & publish The
Psychedelic Review.
In: Whatever's trendy at the moment. "Beatle boots
and granny glasses are really in now!"
Incense: Incense has been used for millennia to provide a
ritual cleansing of a room for religious services. Temples and
churches are fond of it. Supposedly it drives out the "evil
spirits". Most of the incense we use in the west comes from
India. When the hippies got going they would buy incense to mask the
smell of marijuana. Incense can also assist in meditation by giving
your space an exotic feel. Since incense comes in a wonderful
assortment of scents you can just use it to add a nice fragrance to your
house.
Jackson State: Two student protesters at
Jackson State University (Mississippi) were shot and killed by state
police on May 15th,
1970.
Jefferson Airplane:
Another San Francisco band that took off on the Summer of Love. Marty
Balin, Grace Slick, Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Cassady were band members. After
Balin left it became the Jefferson Starship.
Jeanette Rankin Brigade: A coalition of women's peace groups, who demonstrated
against the Vietnam war at the opening of Congress in 1968. 5000
women attended.
Jesus Freaks: A movement of people who just discovered Jesus and
Christianity. They would get together with signs and banners to
promote Jesus. Some hippies went this route. Often they were
'false' hippies, who used the hip image to proselytize Christianity.
Hippies who were Christians sincerely were also Jesus Freaks...and were
cool.
Joint: A marijuana cigarette.
Jonesing: When you want something real bad especially
drugs.
Joneser: Someone who wants drugs real bad that he'll rip you off
if he has to.
Joplin,
Janis: Blues singer extraordinaire. Janis could belt out the
blues like no one else. Her performances at The Monterey Pop
Festival and Woodstock were legendary. With Big Brother and the
Holding Company they blew everyone away with their psychedelic
blues. Cheap Thrills, their debut album featured a classic cover by
Robert Crumb and the hits Summertime and Ball and Chain. Janis'
grief stricken life came to an end with a drug overdose in 1970.
Junkie: A heroin addict.
Karma: Indian term for fate. You reap what you sow. Our
condition in this life is a result of the action we made in past
lives. We reincarnate until we free ourselves from our Karmic
indebtedness.
Kent State:
University where four students were shot and killed by National Guardsmen
during a protest on May 4, 1970.
There is a monument to the students on the Kent State Campus which is
still incomplete. Student activists still have an annual memorial
gathering on the day of the shootings.
Kerouac,
Jack: Beat author wrote "On the Road" and The Dharma Bums, about
the freedom of living each day as it comes. He inspired a whole generation
to get backpacks and take to the road. His beat friends Allen
Ginsberg and Neal Cassady appear in his works. Kerouac coined the
term "Beat Generation" to describe his friends and the phenomenon.
Key: A kilo of marijuana or other drug.
Kesey, Ken:
Famous author, Merry Prankster, Ken wrote: Sometimes a Great Notion and
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. His famous Acid Tests were the first LSD
parties with music and light shows. His legendary 1964 psychedelic
cross country trip in a brightly painted bus inspired many hippies to do
the same.
Kicks: Something you do for fun. Something enjoyable.
Kif: The Moroccan term for marijuana that hasn't been processed
into hashish. Often mixed with tobacco and smoked in a
sipsi.
Killer: Something really great, powerful, or impressive.
"That was sure some killer weed we smoked."
King, Martin Luther: Leader of the
Civil Rights movement, Dr. King was a firm believer in non-violent protest
to achieve the goals of integration and economic, political and social
equality for all people.
Krassner, Paul: Humorist, founding member of the Yippies, and
publisher of the Realist newspaper, he's been called the founder of the
underground press.
Kundalini: A form of energy that lies dormant at the base of the
spine that is channeled upward through the chakras via yoga.
Laid Back: Someone relaxed, easygoing. A
place that's cool. "I've been to the commune, it's real laid
back."
Later: Good bye.
Lay: Someone who has sex. "She was a great lay."
Lay it on me: Give it to me.
Laugh-In: A popular sixties comedy show with Dan Rowan and Dick
Martin as the hosts. Stars included Flip Wilson, Goldie Hawn, Judy Carne
and Arte Johnson. Famous for its humor, zaniness, social commentary and
frenetic pace and editing. It captured the sixties style and
attitude and added it's own set of expressions to the times, like "sock it
to me!".
Lava Lamp - The original is a glass lamp lit
from the bottom with a sort of liquid inside that rises in colorful
amorphous bubbles. These lamps are now enjoying a revival>.
LBJ - Lyndon Baines Johnson - He became President of the United
States upon the death of John F. Kennedy. Was elected in 1964 and
served another four years. Texas democrat was responsible for the
buildup of forces in Vietnam and was in office during the bloodiest
fighting. Along with the next president, republican Richard Nixon
were considered the epitome of the government run by the
military-industrial complex that prospered during the Vietnam war.
These two presidents highlighted the generation gap as they found it
impossible to see the world from a youthful perspective.
Leary,
Timothy: The psychedelic guru, acid
impresario, prolific author, unchallenged hero of the free mind movement.
"Turn-on, tune-in, and drop-out." Those words inspired a generation to
experience the mind expanding capabilities of acid.
Led
Zeppelin: English rock group that was
one of the first "heavy metal" bands. Their biggest hit, Stairway to
Heaven is one of the biggest selling tunes ever. Jimmy Page on lead
guitar and Robert Plant's vocals make for some heavy blues
rock.
Lemon Pipers: One or more person(s) who puts a hole thru a lemon
(other fruit can also be used) then inserts a joint at the other end and
inhales thereby not only cooling the smoke but giving the smoke a scented
flavor. (Rolling papers eventually caught up to this fad and offer a
flavored paper commerically). Also the name of a 60s band who had
one hit, "Green Tamborine".
Lennon,
John: Beatle, poet, artist, activist,
singer, musician. One of the great figures of the 60s.
Controversial, he once said the Beatles were more popular than Jesus (he
was right at the time). He sang about love and peace and his music
inspired millions. He was murdered outside his apartment building in
1980.
Licks:
Chops. Groove. A musicians musicianship. The music they
make.
Lid: A bag of grass, usually about an ounce (28 grams).
Light Shows: A visual performance accompanying music at clubs
and concert venues using strobes, film, video, special effects and more
recently lasers. Andy Warhol put on some famous light shows in
NYC.
Love beads: Love beads were orginally made from small
seeds. They came in numerous patterns, and were given as gifts
between friends or made by the wearer. They were a common sign of
friendship.
Love-In: Like a Be-In it was a reason to get together with other
hippies and have fun. Loving everyone and everything was the general theme
of the event.
- LSD or LSD25: Lysergic Acid Diethylamide. a rye ergot
derivative. First synthesized and absorbed by Albert Hoffman of
Sandoz Labs, Switzerland in 1938. Extremely hallucinogenic in
minute doses, measured in micrograms. Effects can last up to 24 hours
depending upon dose. Used in psychotherapy in the 50s and
60s. Researched at Harvard by Timothy Leary and Richard
Alpert. Both left Harvard and Leary continued as high priest of
the LSD movement. In the 60s acid became the popular way to "trip". An
LSD trip is not to be taken lightly. It is a profound soul shaking
experience that expands one's perceptions and broadens one's mind.
Reactions to LSD, which include physiological and
behavioral changes, anxiety, and hallucinations, are influenced by the
amount of the drug taken and the user's personality and
expectations.
Lude:
A Quaalude, a depressant drug.
Maintain: To keep one's shit together. "Every since my
babe left me I'm finding it hard to maintain."
Make Love Not War!: Slogan that sums up the hippie attitude. Appeared on
signs and buttons during protests
against Vietnam War.
Mamas and Papas: Popular group in the sixties. John Phillips,
Denny, (Mama) Cass Elliot, and Michelle Phillips sang California
Dreaming, Monday, Monday, Creeque Alley.
Man: A dude. The Man is the police. Man! means
damn! My Man! means a friend.
Mantra: A form of meditation that uses repeated phrase(s) that
help to free the yogi from random thoughts by focusing on the
phrase. Different mantras have different effects.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi: Famous guru to the Beatles, Beach Boys, and other
famous personalities. First everyone went to visit him in India, then he
bought his teachings to the U.S. Emphasizing the power of
meditation, he drew a huge following among the hippie generation.
Manson,
Charles: Convicted along with his
followers of the 1969 murders of Sharon Tate and the La Biancas.
Manson had created his own cult out in the California desert. In
his warped mind, he believed that John Lennon's song "Helter Skelter"
was a call to war and mayhem. He used mind control to get his
followers to do whatever he wanted. He is still serving his life
sentence.
Marinol:
Pharmaceutical extract of marijuana, allowed (by U.S. gov't) for those
who have prescription for marijuana.
Marley, Bob: Rastaman
supreme. The charismatic Bob Marley and his band the Wailers burst
onto the music scene in the early 70's bringing Reggae into the
world. His music about love, Jah (god), freedom and equality
touched so many people and inspired many to become rastas.
Mary Jane: Marijuana
Maui Wowie: The fabulously sweet, potent pot grown on the island
of Maui in Hawaii.
Max, Peter: Famous hippie artist famous for album covers,
movies, paintings, advertising. His colorful, flowing style graphics had
a great influence on art in the 60s.
Maya: The veil of materiality and self-delusion that screens
us all from the true reality of oneness.
McGovern, George: Democratic candidate for president in the
1972 elections. He lost out to Richard Nixon. McGovern was
supported by liberals and hippies. We can only wonder, what might
have been...
McKenna,
Terence: Ethnobotanist and author of the book Food of the Gods about
organic psychedelics. Terence is a popular speaker and visionary
who likes to focus on discovering our place in the universe, our reason
for being here, and the future of mankind.
Meditation: An exercise where one focuses one's attention,
releving stress, allowing contemplation.
Mellow:
Something pleasant and enjoyable. Often used to describe the
marijuana high.
Mellow Yellow: Donovan song that had everyone thinking you could get
high smoking banana peels. One
of the greatest put-ons.
Mellow out!: Calm down! Equal to chill out!
Mescaline: A hallucinogen made from the peyote cactus plant,
still used for native american ritual purposes. These cacti are eaten in
raw form. Processed mescaline compound was ingested as a pill form.
Synthetic mescaline made a brief appearance mixed with chocolate powder
and was one of the best highs ever - it made you laugh uncontrollably
for hours. Anyone know how to make more?
Microdot: A type of LSD in a colorful tiny pill.
Mikes: The number of micrograms as in a dose of LSD.
Military-Industrial Complex: The leading force in the American
economy in the 60s. The combination of large American industries with
huge defense contracts. Reaps profits from war. Blamed for
lobbying Congress to increase military spending, to step up war in
Vietnam. In 1960 President Eisenhower warned that the
Military-Industrial complex was getting too big and powerful.
Mind Game: When someone tries to control your mind, often by
trying to bullshit you.
Monterey Pop Festival: This was the first rock festival
ever. Held in 1967, it showcased a whole new genre of music.
Produced by Paul Simon, Johnny Rivers and John Phillips (of the Mamas
and Papas) it was an event that almost didn't happen. Disagreement
between the producers (who wanted to charge for the concerts) and the
musicians (who wanted it to be free) were resolved thanks to impresario
Bill Graham. Acts included memorable performances by Jimi Hendrix
and Janis Joplin. The event was filmed and is available on video.
More power to you!: Good for you.
Morrison, Jim:
Mountain Girl: Aka Carolyn Adams. One of the Merry
Pranksters. She lived with Ken Kesey, and had his child, then
married Jerry Garcia. She is also the author of "Primo Plant," a
marijuana growing guide.
Movie: The reality we create for ourselves based upon a script
we are constantly writing. This concept allows us to take control
of the circumstances of our lives by recognizing we are not victims but
actors in a play who can change our role whenever we choose.
Mr. Natural: Cartoonist
R. Crumb's popular philosophical character was a spoof of gurus and
their followers.
Munchies: Also known as the raving munchies. The mad craving
for food, often sweets that you get after smoking marijuana. It's
so effective as an appetite stimulant, that's one of the main reasons
it's prescribed by Doctors for AIDS and those undergoing
chemotherapy.
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