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Ecstasy: A Book Review
With 24 chapters, six sections, and a detailed appendix Ecstasy: The
Complete Guide (2001 Park Street Press), edited by Dr. Julie Holland, is the
most comprehensive book written on MDMA to date. It adeptly navigates the
cannon of preceding research, answers many novel questions, and excavates
much misinformation. The Complete Guide is packed with the confessions of 30
researchers who expertly opine on MDMA. In tandem they assert that "the
judicious, supervised, and infrequent use of single oral does of MDMA as a
psychiatric medicine may be a revolutionary tool to assist the fields of
psychology and psychiatry."
Each of the six sections triangulates a facet of MDMA research. The first
section deals with the history, pharmacokinetics, and the molecular
structure of MDMA. In the second section the latest findings on the
toxicology of MDMA are presented in a reader-friendly manner. The subsequent
sections deal with MDMA research, psychotherapy, culture and the role the
molecule plays in clinical settings. Through The Complete Guide one can
discover the legal and research status of MDMA internationally, the effects
of MDMA on memory, the claims by clergy of the potential for MDMA to incite
rapture, and much more.
The Complete Guide displays the wide application of MDMA and the passionate
conviction with which its use is supervised. Dr. Holland conducted
interviews with Ann and Alexander Shulgin, Emanuel Sferios, Dr. George
Greer, Dr. Andrew Weil, Dr. Charles Grob, Rabbi Zalman Schachter, and Dr.
Rick
Doblin. The manifold professions represented in the book speak well of both
the exemplary scholarship directed at MDMA and the suppleness of this
substance.
"Pain control" is Dr. Holland's goal. A psychiatrist at Bellevue Hospital,
she is adamant about harm-reduction in two forms. The Complete Guide intends
to protect those who may hurt themselves through an abuse of MDMA and
support the claim that MDMA is a safe and effective medicine for physical
and mental pain. Dr. Holland hopes that The Complete Guide will be the
"instruction manual" that will train and educate people in the beneficial
use of this potent technology to remedy avoidable suffering.
If a balance of rigor and compassion is an attribute of medical inquiry,
then Dr. Holland of the NYU School of Medicine is an icon. Take for example
the Baggott and Mendelson article, "Does MDMA cause Brain Damage?" By
claiming that high or repeated doses of MDMA can damage neural functions,
the article, besides answering a critical question, evinces how The Complete
Guide embraces both the indications and contraindications of MDMA's
benefits. But because Dr. Holland advocates infrequent, efficiently dosed
MDMA sessions in the treatment of specific illnesses, Baggott and
Mendelson's findings do not discredit the ideal forwarded by The Complete
Guide.
Reading The Complete Guide would be a particularly effective lesson for
parents, teachers, and physicians who have been misinformed by 60 Minutes
Oprah, MTV and 20/20. The Complete Guide has the potential to reform abusers
of MDMA, educate the prejudiced, and stimulate veteran entheonauts to
further explore personal dimensions. By educating the public and state
representatives about the therapeutic potentials of MDMA to remedy
post-traumatic stress disorder, pain, alienation, depression, spiritual
bankruptcy, and schizophrenia, The Complete Guide may contribute to the
reformation of MDMA laws and the dissolving of Ecstasy myths.
When finished with the 450 pages it is possible to re-taste that delicious
fragment of the emotional center that MDMA awakens. After reading The
Complete Guide, one gets the impression that this "soul-penicillin" should
be used intentionally and infrequently. Anne Shulgin suggests that one
should use MDMA no more then four times a year. Ralph Metzner and Sophia
Adamson poetically examine the religious flavor of MDMA when used in sacred
spaces. Douglas Rushkoff explores the links between cognitive enhancers,
cultural fluorescence, and tribal consciousness.
If scholastic academies were to recognize the intimate role entheogens have
had in human evolution then The Complete Guide would be the textbook in the
widely popular Entheogens 101 lecture at the University of Utopia. The
Complete Guide is to the psychotechnician what the Physician's Desk
Reference is to the family practitioner. The Complete Guide is exhaustive
and exhibits the completeness possible only with a multidisciplinary study
of Mind.
All proceeds from the sale of the book Ecstasy: the Complete Guide (Park
Street Press 2001) will go towards funding clinical research with MDMA. The
book costs $19.95. Donations to the Holland Fund for Therapeutic MDMA
Research can also be made at Dr. Julie Holland's website drholland.com, or
by sending your tax-deductible check to The Holland Fund c/o MAPS, 2105
Robinson Avenue, Sarasota, Florida 34232.
By Adam Fish