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Sasha #Shulgin died at about 5pm this afternoon. Gate gate para gate parasamgate bodhi svaha! All hail the goer. Our love goes with you.
— Erowid Center (@Erowid) June 3, 2014
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Fire Erowid: Thanks. It's a happy/sad day.How did you get to know Sasha?
We didn't know anything about Sasha when we started Erowid, but we met him soon thereafter (within a year or so). For a decade, Sasha was one of our primary go-to chemistry experts. He was willing to answer questions we had about chemistry to help our understanding and, therefore, our building of chemistry-related resources on Erowid. Most of my knowledge of chemistry comes from watching Sasha's lectures and talking with him over snacks, as he drew "dirty pictures" (chemistry molecules) in the air or on a scrap of napkin. He was a fine teacher.Perhaps more important, Sasha's humble expertise set an incredible example for how to be a popular public figure and run a resource used by millions of people, without becoming jaded or annoyed at the pressure of followers, fans, and admirers.Were you near him when he passed?
We were not nearby physically. We knew that his health was failing rapidly, and we received word from the Shulgin team by phone about an hour and a half after Sasha moved on.What do you see as his legacy, beyond the "Grandfather of Ecstasy" label?
Most of us who knew Sasha hated the "Godfather of Ecstasy" label. Just a little too cliché and oversimplified. Sasha was warm, cheerful, humble, incredibly intelligent, and a skilled, creative chemist. He saw the value in exploring the ways that chemicals affect the human mind, and he wasn't afraid to put his energy and chemistry skills toward the long and complicated process of creating new chemicals he thought might have slightly different (and therefore differently useful) effects.The only practical way to test to see if a chemical is psychoactive, without millions of dollars in research funding, is to have a human try it. Sasha was confident enough in his creations, skilled enough as a chemist, and careful enough in his practices, to be able to try the chemicals he created and determine which had potential.This may surprise you, but I've never done MDMA. If, hypothetically, I had two little tan MDMA pills in a bottle in my medicine cabinet, what do you think Sasha might say to prepare me for the experience?
I don't know what Sasha would say. I'd say be careful. It might not be MDMA. Until you know it is, any other suggestions are moot.Follow Mike Pearl on Twitter.
