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PSFew phrases encapsulate the spirit of the 1960s counterculture as succinctly as Timothy Leary’s famous mantra: “Turn on, tune in, drop out.”
Popularized at the 1967 Human Be-In in San Francisco, the phrase became a rallying cry for a generation exploring altered states of consciousness, rejecting societal norms, and seeking new modes of living.
Leary, a former Harvard psychologist, explained that “turn on” meant activating one’s mind through psychedelic experience, “tune in” signified aligning oneself with authentic experiences, and “drop out” urged a rejection of the established social order.
He wasn’t merely advocating drug use—he saw psychedelics as a means of unlocking higher consciousness and deeper self-awareness.
However, the most controversial part of the phrase was “drop out.”
Leary explicitly encouraged people to leave mainstream institutions—schools, corporate jobs, and societal roles—believing they stifled individual freedom and suppressed consciousness expansion.
He envisioned an exodus from a culture he saw as oppressive, urging people to form new, self-sufficient communities.
While this idea resonated with many disillusioned young people, it also had its flaws.
Dropping out en masse did little to create systemic change, and in many cases, it left individuals without the tools to navigate or reshape society.
That said, Leary’s core insight—that people should be free to craft lives of meaning outside the rigid dictates of conventional society—remains relevant.
Today, his message can be seen less as a blanket rejection of structure and more as an invitation to consciously choose one’s path rather than passively accepting societal norms.
Rather than dropping out entirely, perhaps the challenge is to engage differently—bringing psychedelic wisdom, creativity, and mindfulness into the institutions that shape our world rather than simply walking away from them.
Source: Timothy Leary.
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