Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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179 of 199 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Note-card mania, July 6, 2006
This is less of a book and more of a collection of note cards thrown into the air and then randomly assembled. Sometimes the reader gets a run of a few pages that seem linked, yet in other places Pinchbeck goes from topic to topic in a matter of paragraphs or within one paragraph itself. On pages 52-53 he goes from maya to Relativity Theory to enlightenment to psychic phenomena to synchronicity. Sounds good if you do justice to each of those topics, but not if you are just throwing them out there because they all sound good together.
His propensity for generalizing is rampant with such things as "according to Eastern thought" (cause we all know Hinduism, Buddhism, and Taoism are really of one mind). These generalizations turn scary whenever he broaches the topic of women. His anger and bitterness towards women (p.356) is obviously based on personal history, but he tries to couch it in cosmic terms. He also rails against monogamy, but his argument seems to be that monogamy is getting in the way of him having sex with whomever he wants (seriously). At one points he has the arrogance to write, "if women want to do the work of integrating their shadows" (p. 328), as if there are not legions of women out there doing it to a degree he can't begin to approach himself.
In places where he writes on his work with plant medicine (p. 254 -260), he seems to hit his stride and some of his best reflections come out. It seems as if the constraint of keeping to a story, however briefly, does him a world of good in regards to being coherent. It's always good to hear the plants speak, even if through such a shaky scribe.
I could go on about such things as Pinchbeck suggesting we deal with the issue of alien visitors by applying the nondual perspective of Dzogchen (as usual, there may be something in there, but not the way he slaps them together), but I will stop here. My suggestion is to give it a good 10 - 20 pages of reading in a bookstore before buying it, as I suspect people will have widely varying reactions (hence the differing reviews). Cheers.
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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
No Breaking Open the Head, May 19, 2008
Pinchbeck's "Breaking Open the Head" was as good a book as this one is awful.
In "2012" Pinchbeck capitalizes on two heavy cultural phenomena, one contemporary and the other ancient. A smart student of cultural trends, he rides the cresting, recent wave of renewed psychedelic research, entheogenic studies and self-experimentation; and as New Age Consciousness Wonk he also invokes the ancient, time-tested vehicles/archetypes of Prophet of Doom and End of World Preacher (though Pinchbeck's Apocalyse is of a particularly unspecific, vague, and metaphysical nature, when he is challenged about it; he will not tell you what the Apocalypse is, and he does not hesitate from using that undefined fear to sell books).
To these two Main Ingredients he tosses in a few smidgeons of UFO Religion, a morsel of Goddess spirituality, and a pinchbeck of post-modern neo-Mayanism (nothing like a dead religion; no living followers to challenge half-baked modern interpretation and misappropriation by the white man). And Bam! You got your basic Pinchbeck layer cake. Throw in some hints to the ladies that his guru stud services are available, and there's your frosting. But this rock and roll psychedelic celebrity cake, though loaded with calories, has zero nutritional value. Its only purpose is to put Pinchbeck on the lecture circuit and generate fame at Burning Man and a New York bohemia notable mention. Bon Apetit!
In a little more detail . . .
When I spend time reading about psychedelic culture, I want to read something original. Instead we get in "2012" highly secondary and derivative ramblings about a dozen different ideas originated and popularized by other people.
2012 as a psychedelic focus was popularized by Terence McKenna. Pinchbeck is no McKenna. There are no original ideas here. More distressing is the way Pinchbeck appears to be riding that old faithful steed of crazy eyed prophets everywhere, the Horse of the Apocalypse. By hitching his dreams to the End of the World, apparently he hopes to make a living on the lecture circuit, and increase his circle of shamanic goddess groupies, for at least the next four years (until the 2012 meme dries up).
The autobiographical content is embarrassing and inexplicable. Apparently Pinchbeck's celebrity hobnobbing has gone to his head; he feels that he himself is interesting enough to force us to wade through his life story. Uh uh - I advise you to move along, there is nothing to see here. Just another minion of the counterculture who thinks he is unique. My mother might have thought him interesting, but he's really just another self-obsessed, moribund hipster, and I've already seen plenty of that to last a lifetime.
Using psychedelics and psychedelic reputation for sex is nothing new. Timothy Leary wrote the book on taking advantage of women from a guru / psychedelic provider power position. Is this a path that Pinchbeck really wants to follow?
To conclude on a positive note: "Breaking Open the Head" was a useful book as an introduction to the entheogenic experience and culture. I recommend people read that book instead. Or don't read any Pinchbeck at all, until he decides to come up with a new idea. Maybe he needs to find some new psychotropic medicines, because the current ones aren't working.
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134 of 156 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
too much ego, October 14, 2006
For someone who has spent so much time ostensibly obliterating his ego, Pinchbeck uses the words "I, me, and mine" with surprising frequency. "Breaking Open the Head" was a brave and well-told story, and Pinchbeck does have great skill at telling the tales of his own adventures down the rabbit hole. He is, at his best, a journalist with a skill for wrapping his own experience into fascinating questions.
But 2012 is a disorganized, rambling repeat of many of the delightful "Breaking Open" tales with some vague and poor attempts at analyzing and synthesizing "scholarly" information about the upcoming apocalypse, mysticism, crop circles, and psychedelics.
2012 left me with the nagging, slightly sticky feeling that Pinchbeck was not a wide-eyed explorer of consciousness, but rather a rich Manhattan art world brat (his description of walking around Berlin in the rain is particularly indicative) who left his wife and daughter in pursuit of the End of the World Party complete with as much free sex and intoxication as he could afford. Rock star or mystic? Free thinker or man trapped by his own pursuit of What Is Cool?
After bushwacking through the crop circle revelations and the mysteries of the modern calendar, 2012 settles upon and rediscovers - or discovers, as Pinchbeck seems to believe - the complex world of non-monogamy. He declares that the polyamorists among us are more emotionally evolved and free, and uses this thin, tired excuse to treat women with great disrespect. One wonders if the feminine principle Pinchbeck claims to value includes women over 40, mothers, and women who choose celibacy as a spiritual pursuit.
Pinchbeck pays a great deal of lip service to the necessity of compassion and community, but all his stories are about skipping from country to country, enjoying himself at Burning Man, exploring the jungles of priestesses and princesses...all quite selfish pursuits. If his compassion is so great, why doesn't he write about his volunteer work with the poor? The hungry? The disabled? The unhip, unwashed masses? I finished the book realizing that it doesn't make as good or salable a story to spend your time with those members of your community, that Pinchbeck's fans would much rather read about the heartfelt, wacky hijinks of the Man Who Would Be Terrence McKenna.
Leave yourself entertained and intruigued by "Breaking Open the Head", and forget the ego of "2012".
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