instead of  just    believing.” She had turned  Bill    Richards’s  flight
instructions    into    a   manual  for living.
Richard Boothby did much    the same    thing,  converting  his insight
about   letting go  into    a   kind    of  ethic:
During  my  session this    art of  relaxation  itself  became  the
basis   of  an  immense revelation, as  it  suddenly    appeared    to
me  that    something   in  the spirit  of  this    relaxation, something
in  the achievement of  a   perfect,    trusting    and loving  openness
of  spirit, is  the very    essence and purpose of  life.   Our task    in
life    consists    precisely   in  a   form    of  letting go  of  fear    and
expectations,   an  attempt to  purely  give    oneself to  the impact
of  the present.John    Hayes,  the psychotherapist,    emerged with    “his    sense   of  the
concrete    destabilized,”  replaced    by  a   conviction  “that   there’s a   reality
beneath the reality of  ordinary    perceptions.    It  informed    my  cosmology—
that    there   is  a   world   beyond  this    one.”   Hayes   particularly    recommends
the experience  to  people  in  middle  age for whom,   as  Carl    Jung    suggested,
experience  of  the numinous    can help    them    negotiate   the second  half    of
their   lives.  Hayes   added,  “I  would   not recommend   it  to  young   people.”
Charnay’s   journey at  Hopkins solidified  her commitment  to  herbal
medicine    (she    now works   for a   supplement  maker   in  Northern
California);    it  also    confirmed   her in  a   decision    to  divorce her husband.
“Everything was now so  clear   to  me. I   came    out of  the session,    and my
husband was late    to  pick    me  up. I   realized,   this    is  the theme   with    us.
We’re   just    really  different   people. I   just    got my  ass kicked  today,  and I
needed  him to  be  on  time.”  She broke   the news    to  him in  the car going
home    and has not looked  back.
To  listen  to  these   people  describe    the changes in  their   lives   inspired    by
their   psilocybin  journeys    is  to  wonder  if  the Hopkins session room    isn’t   a
kind    of  “human  transformation  factory,”   as  Mary    Cosimano,   the guide
who has probably    spent   more    time    there   than    anyone  else,   described   it  to
me. “From   now on,”    one volunteer   told    me, “I  think   of  my  life    as  before
and after   psilocybin.”    Soon    after   his psilocybin  experience, Brian   Turner,
the physicist,  quit    his job with    the military    contractor  and moved   to
