Pubdate: Mon, 16 Oct 2006
Source: San Mateo County Times, The (CA)
Copyright: 2006 ANG Newspapers
Contact:  http://www.sanmateocountytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/392
Author: Julia Scott, Staff Writer

LOCAL POET KEEPS KESEY LEGACY ALIVE

LA HONDA -- The redwood trees surrounding Ken Kesey's  old house seem 
strangely peaceful for all they've been  through.

Few signs remain of the Merry Pranksters' camp in the  woods, their 
1960s LSD parties and sound experiments  immortalized by Tom Wolfe in 
"The Electric Kool-Aid  Acid Test."

A blue splash of paint on a tree trunk is the last  vestige of the 
Pranksters' forest-wide paint job, once  a Day-Glo cathedral of pink, 
blue and green.

A long wire disappearing into the branches of another  redwood marks 
their habit of setting microphones on the  forest floor to pick up 
the sounds of scurrying  woodland creatures -- and the occasional snooping cop.

Together with Pescadero's Venture Retreat Center and  the Esalen 
Institute in Big Sur, the Kesey home is one  of the last living 
symbols of the Human Potential  Movement, a psychotherapy-based 
branch of hippie  culture born in the Bay Area.

Local poet Terry Adams was cognizant of the history of  Kesey's 
house, known as "The Nest," when he bought it  in 1997. He preserved 
everything except the floors and  wall paneling. The living room 
still contains a Day-Glo  piano decorated with a bright collage of 
photographs  and magazine clippings -- images from the Kama Sutra, 
pictures of Kesey in drag, and photos of counterculture  icons Allen 
Ginsburg and Timothy Leary.

Adams studied Kesey's first book, "One Flew Over the  Cuckoo'sNest," 
in graduate school in the 1960s. In  1977, he led a writer's group at 
Prometheus, a Palo-Alto based offshoot of the Human  Potential 
Movement. There he met Vic Lovell, the  founder of Prometheus and a 
friend of Kesey's who  helped Adams buy the house in 1997.

On a sunny afternoon in 1999, Kesey held a ceremony in  a circle of 
redwoods with Adams, his wife, and several  of the original Merry 
Pranksters to bless the house. He  died two years later.

Sitting by the fire, Adams reflected on how much had  changed since 
the years that Kesey's drug experiments  seized the public imagination.

"One thought is how incredibly dramatic it was. The  Kesey part of 
the Human Potential Movement was doomed  to burn itself out pretty 
quickly. But I think there's  a slower, more enduring impulse, 
particularly out here  in California, to keep the Human Potential 
Movement  alive," said Adams.

Lovell, a resident of Menlo Park, has a different  opinion about 
Kesey's influence.

"I don't think Ken was interested in the Human  Potential Movement, 
or the peace movement, or the New  Left. Ken was a movement unto 
himself," he said.

Lovell, Kesey and many of their friends were early  subjects of 
government-run LSD, peyote and psilocybin  mushroom tests conducted 
by the Menlo Park Veterans  Hospital in the late 1950s; eventually, 
those drugs  found their way into the Bay Area hippie scene.

Those tests, which were also conducted at the Stanford  University 
Medical School, formed the basis for  "Cuckoo's Nest," which Kesey 
dedicated to Lovell.

"I thought he was a little too overly persuaded by his  vision and 
the world the way he saw it. I tried to be a  rationalist in relation 
to him," recalled Lovell.

Prometheus, which Lovell founded in a Palo Alto commune  in the 
1960s, used psychodrama, or spontaneous theater  role playing, to 
address personal trauma and  interpersonal conflicts. Many of the 
groups that met at  Prometheus held retreat weekends at the Venture 
Retreat Center in Pescadero.

One men's group founded in those days, to which Adams  belongs, still 
meets at Venture on a regular basis.

Adams tries to honor Kesey's legacy with one wild house  party a year 
with music and poetry, which always lasts  until the police come by 
to break it up.

"As far as I know, no one has dropped acid at our  parties -- except 
maybe once," joked Adams.
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MAP posted-by: Elaine