A few evenings ago I watched a DVD in the company of two
college sophomores (a young guy and gal). The film was Wes Craven’s Cursed, a modestly parodic werewolf
movie starring Christina Ricci – at least I think
Wes intended parody. Maybe he didn’t. Regardless, more interesting to me than
the movie was the way the sophomores watched it. At the same time the DVD was
playing, they ran computer games on their laptops while sending and receiving
texts (and accessing the internet) on their cell phones. How much attention they paid to each electronic
medium I couldn’t say. (One thing that they didn’t do very much was talk to
each other.)
This is the new commonplace. I see similarly distributed
attention in all sorts of settings. (I don’t pretend to be a good multitasker
myself.) Is this immersion in communications media an expansion of human consciousness
of the kind once sought by 50s/60s gurus, or a dilution of it by multiple
distractions? I don’t know, but I’m inclined toward the latter. Quaint as they
seem today, the mind-expansion gurus were a fascinating bunch, and many of
their ideas involved eliminating distractions in order to raise one’s awareness
of the moment. Some of their methods involved mind-altering drugs. Among those
with legitimate scientific and academic credentials, Dr. Timothy Leary is the
best remembered experimenter with psychedelics, but he was far from alone. Psychedelic
drugs didn’t enhance anyone’s ability to perform everyday chores and
calculations. Quite on the contrary. While trippers perceive the objects and
people around them in a new way (sometimes seeing things that aren’t even
there), they don’t do so in a manner compatible with multitasking. The frequently
experienced one-with-the-universe sensation cannot survive answering a text
message while navigating a first-person-shooter video game. But while the gurus
are most notorious for their drug experimentations, they also tried
non-pharmaceutical techniques such as meditation. One of the most radical
non-pharmaceutical methods of eliminating distraction as a gateway to higher
consciousness (one that I’ve never tried, but might yet) was the sensory deprivation
tank.
The sensory deprivation tank was the brainchild of
neuro-psychiatrist John C. Lilly. In the early 1950s the prevailing view was
that consciousness was intimately connected with environmental stimuli;
deprived of any stimuli, a person would fall asleep. Lilly wasn’t so sure. He
constructed his first tank in 1954 to test the idea. In a soundless dark
chamber a person would float on salt water at body temperature; to the extent
possible, all physical sensations, including gravity, were eliminated. Sessions
lasted from one to several hours. Few people who tried it slept. Their
experiences ranged from complete relaxation to rampant thoughts to
hallucinations. Typically floaters lost a sense of time, and were unable to
judge how long they were inside. Lilly thought the tank sessions enhanced
consciousness and creativity; he tried combining deprivation sessions with LSD,
which was legal prior to 1964, with results that were often interesting and
sometimes alarming. Other researchers copied his tanks and tweaked the design. Private
businesses began to rent time in them to the general public, and these commercial
sensory deprivation tanks became something of a minor fad in the 1960s.
The tanks fell out of fashion (like so much else of 60s culture)
by the mid-70s. In recent years, however, they have made a comeback. Nowadays
they are more commonly called isolation tanks or float tanks, and a fair number
of commercial spas offer them as relaxation therapy. The supposed benefits,
along with altered consciousness, include pain reduction (sessions do seem to
promote endorphin release), stress reduction, and lowered blood pressure. Joe
Rogan, the host of Fear Factor, is a
big fan of them, telling The Atlantic
writer Kyle Dowling, "I think it's one of
the most incredible pieces of equipment for self-help and introspective thought
that you could ever find." The benefits arise from not multitasking during
the sessions – or even tasking.
I think modern communications
and electronics are wonderful. It would be silly to feel otherwise while blogging
on the internet. Distractions have their value. However, there is something to
be said for cutting them off now and then. For anyone who feels the attraction
of the iPhone too strongly to achieve this through simple meditation in a dark
room, sessions in an isolation tank might be a solution. Close the chamber
door, float, and let time vanish. Alone with ourselves, we can meet our own
thoughts. It used to be called mind expansion. Perhaps it is.
A Particularly Swank Sensory Deprivation Tank
Altered States (1980): In sensory deprivation
experiments, William Hurt alters his consciousness (and gets a helping hand back). I wouldn’t
count on experiencing anything as colorful as this.
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