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Ten Trips review: What tripping taught an academic about psychedelics

From ketamine in a London kitchen to wachuma in the Colombian Amazon, self-described "douchey forty-nine-year-old psychedelic virgin" and neuropsychologist Andy Mitchell hopes his trips will teach us more about the drugs
Men preparing the root and the leaves to be cooked together for the preparation of Ayahuasca tea. (Photo by: Giulio Paletta/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Preparing the psychedelic ayahuasca – but will Indigenous groups benefit?
Giulio Paletta/Education Images/Universal Images/Getty


Andy Mitchell (Bodley Head)

DESCRIBING your psychedelic trip to other people is notoriously dull. Poet or not, there will always be a gap between the raw experience of LSD or magic mushrooms, and a second-hand metaphor.

So it was with hesitation that I picked up neuropsychologist Andy Mitchell’s book Ten Trips: The new reality of psychedelics, detailing his personal journey. In a few months, Mitchell spends several hundred hours taking 10 drugs as “a douchey forty-nine-year-old psychedelic virgin”.

But his honesty about his recent personal traumas, and about the risks of psychedelics running alongside the highs and the revelations, make him a thoughtful guide.

US citizens appear to be warming to psychedelics, and therapies using them are close to being legalised or decriminalised in more states. Meanwhile, investors are cashing in. And even though many psychedelics originated with Indigenous peoples, they rarely benefit and are often excluded.

Then there is the touchy issue that some psychedelic therapies used to treat depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and addiction haven’t proven as impressive in , not to mention the small but significant () cases of bad trips. If and how to meld psychedelic therapy with Western society is still up for grabs.

As a sceptic, Mitchell takes this in his stride. Psychedelic science, he writes, can veer towards “evangelical optimism”. But he hopes that embracing the nuances of psychedelic trips will help us “think better about these drugs, and maybe with them too”.

Mitchell starts in a London kitchen with a “shallow” ketamine trip, and ends taking wachuma with a shaman in the Colombian Amazon. On the way, magic mushrooms bring him to tears at the sight of a trash can, while ayahuasca sees him tormented by eels.

This isn’t Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, but it doesn’t need to be. Some of Mitchell’s clearest insights occur when his reports are interwoven with armchair philosophy and new theories about how psychedelics work. Science can only have one view of psychedelics, but, as virtual-reality pioneer Jaron Lanier tells Mitchell, objective science entails “a collapse of experience itself“. Ten Trips is a powerful reminder that psychedelics can’t be made sense of entirely within a framework of chemical interactions in the brain. We need to view them as something potent, to be respected.

Topics: Book review / Drugs / Psychedelics