Author Topic: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke  (Read 164 times)

NeilPatrickHarris

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Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« on: November 18, 2010, 01:46:11 PM »
Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke. Donations and volunteers asked to preserve his work

I just learned via Psychedelic Research that one of the greatest researchers in psychoactive drugs, Alexander Shulgin, 85, has been hospitalized with a stroke. He was surgically intervened two years ago to replace a defective aortic valve and, given his age, he may leave us at any moment.

Shulgin, a Ph. D. Biochemist, has made extensive research in synthesis drugs such the widely known ecstasy, which he intended to use for the treatment of depression and other psychological disorders.

In 1994 he saw his laboratory raided by the DEA after he published PHiKAL, a chemical love story.

The drug knowledge vault, Erowid, is now asking for volunteers (for transcriptions and image enhancement) and donations in order to help preserve his legacy. You can donate here (either to Erowid or directly to the Shulgins) and you can volunteer your services here.

http://forwhatwearetheywillbe.blogspot.com/2010/11/alexander-shulgin-85-hospitalized-with.html

here's the donation link:
http://www.erowid.org/donations/project_shulgin.php

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as much as we all owe this man, it would be very fitting if those of us who could afford to give away a few dollars could donate

NeilPatrickHarris

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #1 on: November 18, 2010, 02:00:46 PM »
director of sound made a post on another forum, i'm going to crosspost it here.  just to give as much info as possible:

Quote
our beloved dr. sasha shulgin has had a stroke!!! this was sent to me by his caretaker on facebook:

PLEASE HELP, SASHA NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT

Hello Everyone ~ This morning on the way to the hospital for a scheduled test, Sasha had a stroke. He has been struggling for six months with an ulcer on his left foot that won’t heal, hoping to avoid amputation. Sasha & Ann have been in serious financial trouble for some years, and the coming medical bills will be a burden they can’t bear alone. Please, express your gratitude for all the work that Sasha has done, for everything he has given to the world, and give something back. Think of all the ways that your life, and the lives of others, have been healed, transformed, and bettered by this wonderful man. He needs your help now. No amount is too small or too large. Please give until it feels good...not until it hurts.

For non-tax-deductible contributions, Paypal $ to [annandsashashulgin@comcast.net] or snailmail: Sasha Shulgin, c/o Transform Press, PO Box 13675, Berkeley CA 94712.

For tax-deductible online donations to support the completion of Shulgin publishing projects that are underway: http://www.erowid.org/donations/project_shulgin.php

Please spread this information.

Thank you and all my love,
Greg Manning

embezzler

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #2 on: November 18, 2010, 02:02:42 PM »
Shit.

Hope he will recover and that a stroke doesnt damage such a brilliant mind.

All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream...

zajcek01

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #3 on: November 18, 2010, 03:12:42 PM »
Holly shit!

I hope he will recover. :'(
I'm just a dreamer.......

overunity33

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #4 on: November 18, 2010, 09:01:09 PM »
Damn, can't believe it.  I feel for the guy and really hope the shulgin index is close enough to completion to be published after this.  All the bees with dripping hives need to send money to the erowid collective and also for his personal expenses...

Sedit

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #5 on: November 19, 2010, 03:19:52 AM »
I wish him the best without a doubt but I smell fish and it isn't methylamine

Someone please tell me WTF all this donation talk is about? If I where rich or atlest very well off which im sure he is and I had a stroke would you send me money? Would I even ask?

Something does not smell right.
There once were some bees and you took all there stuff!
You pissed off the wasp now enough is enough!!!

NeilPatrickHarris

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #6 on: November 19, 2010, 02:50:07 PM »
I wish him the best without a doubt but I smell fish and it isn't methylamine

Someone please tell me WTF all this donation talk is about? If I where rich or atlest very well off which im sure he is and I had a stroke would you send me money? Would I even ask?

Something does not smell right.

it goes into detail on the erowid link.  personally i don't care what he uses the money for, i just donated and he can buy a gold-plated port-o-potty for all i care.  it's the least i can do for all that he's done for our community

salat

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #7 on: November 19, 2010, 05:02:51 PM »
My impression is they are wanting money to pay to preserve his work - that part that is unfinished and/or get a brain dump.  Many things not ready to publish may need to be preserved. 
Don't know, but that is the impression I got.

Salat
Salat

embezzler

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #8 on: November 19, 2010, 05:47:00 PM »
I don't think that Sasha was ever truly well off. From my reading I believe that the house he lives in was inherited and that after leaving Dow he mostly survived from patent royalties.

He made some money from the 4 books he published but again I dont think that it is enough to pay for the research he undertook.

The cost of transcribing the notes is the Erowid project but there have been numerous fundraisers for the maneven at last years MAPS meetings.

I really do not believe he was ever rich and considering the commercial potential of his discoveries he is a pauper when he could have been king.



All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream...

jon

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #9 on: December 15, 2010, 05:04:58 AM »
such is the fate of a good chemist
i had a lacunar stroke not long ago i had trouble remembering to wipe my ass, strokes are no joke.
i paid in i don't think it's a scam.
i hope he recovers it took me a long time to tell you what day it was, or what i happened 5 minutes ago.
fucks your noodle up bigtime.

WifiGirl

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #10 on: January 10, 2011, 10:18:33 AM »
Here is an update letter from Ann on this if anyone is interested

Dear People,

Again, it took longer than I had expected to get back to you, but th...ose of you who have had the experience of putting somebody into hospital will understand. The whole world (my personal world, that is) suddenly changes, and there are new dimensions, new schedules, new expectations and new fears to deal with. Like – are the nurses good and friendly and capable? Do the doctors know what they’re doing and to whom they are doing it? Do they remember which Sasha leg is supposed to get the skin graft? Does the nursing station serve the family members hot coffee and tea whenever they need it? Turns out, we are in a very, very old hospital (when is the last time you saw windows that opened with a crank?), and nobody has tea and coffee for family members, as the former hospital did. That’s okay. There’s a cafeteria downstairs and after hours there are machines that dispense. What they dispense is --- well, it’s hot, anyway.

As for Sasha (you were wondering when I’d get around to the most important part of this adventure, yes?) – his graft surgery went very well, or so the doctor says, and he doesn’t seem to be having a lot of pain, so far, which is a good sign. To my surprise, they haven’t put the leg into any harness or other kind of restraint, but he’s wearing the soft boots which he’s had on for months, and we do our best to keep the leg up on a pillow. Oh, yes—we were urged to have our caregivers here night and day, because Sasha’s memory is severely impaired, and directions given to him by a nurse are forgotten ten minutes later So his caregivers (Chimmy, Vickie and Carlos) are his memory.

There have been glitches in communication about the particular pain medication being used by our primary care physician, and the nursing staff is sometimes aware and alert and other times somewhat clueless, depending on how well the outgoing nurses brief the incoming ones at the times of shift change. One breakfast tray never made it to Sasha, but he ate a good lunch.

We think he’ll be here until Monday or Tuesday, and we still have hopes of getting a private room, but the hope is fading, since this hospital was inundated by sick people on Monday, and they’re still full. Our doctor did his best to get us on the private room list, since a very compassionate friend offered to pay for it, but there is little hope that’ll happen. Luckily, the other patient in this room is a very nice gentleman, so there is no problem. Besides, we’ve learned to be grateful for human beings who are pleasant and cooperative, having experienced the alternative the first night we were here. There was a 26 year old male who didn’t like being intruded upon by another patient, and expressed (repeatedly) his dislike of women talking – obviously, he meant women doing anything – and during the night, he cursed Vickie, who was caring for Sasha, and kept cursing until he fell asleep He was probably in pain, having crashed his motorcycle, and he also was probably the only son of a gangster who had taught him to spread fear and panic wherever he went, in order to get his way, and the son was only trying to emulate Daddy and didn’t know any better. The nurses who had come in contact with this future crime kingpin made clear their joy at his transfer to another floor, although they tried to be discrete, and we were more than happy to find him absent when we returned the next day. It was a thankfully brief reminder of the fact that we, ourselves, live in a community (worldwide) full of really good human beings, kind and compassionate and loving and possessed – one and all – of minimally destructive dark sides. Of course, I mean all of you.

Love and Blessings -- Ann

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Word is that donations have been extremely helpful and that they are still trying to cover ongoing medical costs. 

Spiderwort

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #11 on: January 10, 2011, 09:28:55 PM »
Push on brother. The world just wouldn't be the same without your contributions.

Every single one of us owes this man more than we could ever give him.

embezzler

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Re: Alexander Shulgin, 85, hospitalized with a stroke
« Reply #12 on: January 10, 2011, 09:34:46 PM »
A brief googling suggests that the man is out of hospital following a successful vacuum wrapped skin graft on the ulcer. Hopefully the mental effects wont persist.

 Maybe I am naieve but I would rather have my body fail than my mind.
All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream...