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Thea Wood's avatar

It’s been decades since I read On The Road, but I do remember my impressions if not the storyline. I felt that Jack (Sal) oscillated between admiration and jealousy of Neal (Dean). The negative introvert who wanted to live vicariously through his friend who seemed to have a charmed existence. Even when there was no charm in Neal’s often selfish “care-free” actions. No amount of mind altering substances could free Jack of the obsession or inability to just let go, perhaps because Jack was simply wired to resist change (which reminds me of psychological studies of conservatism).

Thought: Maybe the hippies confused Jack, the anti-hero, with the true hippie hero (Neal) because Jack penned the narrative. If so, perhaps Jack was bitter that all these hippies could embrace and live free from convention and guilt when he could not. And Jack would be right— in that sense, they were disconnected from him and he deserved no more credit than being the messenger.

Of course, it’s just an impression and I could be totally wrong.

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Michael K. Fell's avatar

Living here in Oregon, it is steeped in the legacy of Kesey and the Grateful Dead. The Oregon Country Fair that the Dead famously played in August 1972 still lives on in merriment, with 'Furthur' parked out front (not the original, but a bold statement of the psychedelic history and what to expect inside the Fair).

The endless Grateful Dead tribute or jam-based bands that play both Eugene and Portland, mainly to an audience of aging doctors, lawyers, and venture capitalists who bust out their tye-dyes for the gig, mixed with younger kids enjoying legalized weed with their bluegrass sounds, contributes to the enduring influence the Dead have on this part of the US.

Kesey and his pranksters loved a party and wanted to have fun. They were completely different than Leary and Alpert, who saw the psychedelic experience as a way to channel and expedite spirituality through chemistry. When Kesey and the Pranksters showed up in Millbrook, it was the perfect example of stuffy East Coast psychedelic spiritual academia vs. West Coast psychedelic Animal House lunacy. 

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