Why it is an honor to pay income tax

In the 1950s, Dr. Abram Hoffer, together with Dr. Humphrey Osmond, successfully treated hundreds of schizophrenic patients at the Saskatchewan Hospital, with supplements aimed at correcting the body’s biochemical imbalances, a treatment approach later termed “orthomolecular medicine.”Dr. Osmond and his student Dr. John Smythies noticed that schizophrenic hallucinations are like hallucinations suffered by otherwise normal people who have taken a bad mescaline trip. Mescaline belongs to a family of psychedelic compounds known as phenethylamines. It is present in several cactus species of the American Southwest and the Andes mountain range of South America and used by native American tribes in certain religious and mystical practices. Adrenaline, which is naturally produced in the body, is similar in its properties to mescaline.http://holisticschizophrenia.blogspot.com/2009/04/why-it-is-honor-to-pay-income-tax.html

Comments

Love your journal

Love your journal Rossa!

Reminds me how so many people accept conventional 'cure' as equating someone generally comatose, watching TV all day, very little in terms of participating in life, family or community.

The Orthomolecular/Dr. Hoffer's concept of cure for schizophrenics was more than that. It did mean that they were active participants of their community - tax payers et al.

I can't help but think of Josh Wapp's life as detailed in his own comic book "Jumping the Fence: A True Story of Breaking Free from the Psychiatric Industry.

Image of Cover: http://www.joshwapp.com/Tricky%20Images/jtfcover.jpg
Image Page 1: http://www.joshwapp.com/thumnails/jtf%20p%2001.jpg
Image In hospital of forced injection: http://www.joshwapp.com/thumnails/jtf%20p%2002.jpg

Purchase

through Comixpress
http://store.comixpress.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=24&pr...

or

International Schizophrenia Foundation
centre@orthomed.org

Thanks, Talya. In short, Dr.

Thanks, Talya. In short, Dr. Hoffer expects people to become normal. This a a liberating concept, believe me, because the "vibes" I often got from other doctors is that schizophrenia is a grim, unending struggle. Who needs that if you are hoping to get better?

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