Why
Are so Many Creative People Linked to Drug Use?
By Dr.Fourkan Ali
Peaches
Geldof, Amy Winehouse, Philip Seymour Hoffman – three incredibly creative
people who died at the hands of drug overdose. But why? What is it about drugs
and alcohol that seem to attract artists of all kinds? Why are so many creative
people linked to drug use?
Throughout
history there have been many famously creative individuals linked to substance
abuse of some sort. For example, author Ernest Hemingway was a noted alcoholic
for most of his adult life. Other notable substance abusers include Beethoven,
actress Edie Falco, actor Johnny Depp, and late comedian Robin Williams.
Some
suggest that creative people link drugs and alcohol to their creativity. Others
say that any supposed link is not real; it is just a crutch to be leaned on
when those in the arts world realise they have a problem that cannot be
overcome. Maybe there is a link between certain substances and creativity,
maybe there isn’t.
The Psychedelic 60s
History
is replete with individuals involved in the arts who used alcohol and drugs.
However, things took a decidedly different turn in the 1960s, thanks to
research conducted by psychologist and author Timothy Leary. It was Leary who
brought psychedelic drugs into the mainstream under the guise of potential
physical and psychological benefits.
In his book The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book
of the Dead, Leary wrote:
Of course, the drug
dose does not produce the transcendent experience. It merely acts as a chemical
key — it opens the mind, frees the nervous system of its ordinary patterns and
structures. The nature of the experience depends almost entirely on set and
setting.
The
point Leary was making here is that psychoactive drugs free the mind from the
normal constraints that guard its activity. In so doing, Leary asserted that
there were other states of consciousness that could only be achieved through
drug use. It was his revolutionary ideas that opened the door to socially
acceptable drug use in the 1960s and 70s. The world has not looked back since.
Perhaps
it is the ‘sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll’ revolution of Leary’s day that has
resulted in such widespread drinking and drug use among the arts crowd. Had his
work not become so widely popular, perhaps there would be fewer Philip Seymour
Hoffmans and Peaches Geldofs whose lives end so tragically.
Sobriety Brings Truth
It
is easy for those of us who have never struggled with substance abuse to look
from the outside and see how destructive drinking and drugs are. Nevertheless,
it is nearly impossible for the substance abuser to recognise it him or
herself. As such, it is amazing what happens when one becomes sober. Life
suddenly becomes much clearer without the haze of drugs or alcohol clouding
one’s judgement.
For every star who claims drink and drugs aid
creativity, another has come clean and recognised the truth of drug addiction. Even Robin Williams, prior to his tragic
demise, spoke the truth about alcoholism and drug use during periods of
sobriety. His comedic brilliance aside, Williams recognised that drug and
alcohol would be his downfall if he failed to achieve abstinence.
Unfortunately, he was right.
Those
of us at Addiction Helper know first-hand the destruction drugs and alcohol
wreak on individuals and their families. We urge you not to fall for the lie
that you need addictive substances in order to be creative. You do not.
Moreover, even if drugs and alcohol open your mind to some extent, as Timothy
Leary claimed, the eventual payback is most certainly hell. It is not worth it.
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