Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD-25) as a Facilitating Agent in Psychotherapy
Archives of General Psychiatry – March 01, 1960
Source: OpenAlex
Summary
Hallucinogens like Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD-25), Psilocybin, and Mescaline demonstrate a remarkable capacity to enhance psychotherapeutic processes. Insights from Psychedelics and Drug Studies suggest these compounds broaden awareness, enabling a psychotherapist to help patients access repressed memories and conflicts. This application in Psychology and Psychotherapy Techniques and Applications facilitates profound self-insight. Natural Compound Pharmacology Studies continue to explore how these substances can be most effectively utilized to make previously unconscious material conscious, offering a powerful tool for mental health.
Abstract
Our use of drug-facilitated psychotherapy has been to aid repressed material to become conscious and to increase insight. Any method or tool which facilitates these processes has the possibility of being a valuable psychotherapeutic tool. Certain drugs on which we have done research, such as mescaline, ALD-52, ibogaine, psilocybin, Ditran (N-ethyl-3-piperidyl cyclopentylphenyl glycolate HC1), and lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD-25), have the capacity to broaden the patient’s spectrum of awareness. If a patient uses this enhanced capacity to look inward, he is often enabled, particularly in the case of LSD-25, to see and experience many affects, childhood memories, conflicts, and impulse strivings which were previously blotted out by the repressive forces. The present study was conducted in an attempt further to evaluate the use of LSD-25 as an aid to psychotherapy and to develop procedures and techniques for its most effective utilization with