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Hippyland Glossary A to B

Here are all those groovy terms
that hippies use and what they mean. If you have something to add to this
list, please let us know.
You can search this page by going to Edit, Find on your menu bar or Cntl-F.

Also check out Famous
Hippy Quotes

1-A: Status determined by draft board that you
are currently fit and available to serve in the military.

1-O: See Conscientious Objector.

4-F: Exemption from military service due to mental or physical
disability.


Buy2001
– A Space Odyssey:
Written by Arthur C Clarke. The movie
was directed by Stanley Kubrick. It was touted as the ultimate trip
in this poster. And many people took those words to heart as this
was indeed a great trip. Man’s evolution is directed to the stars
by strange black obelisks. Hal, the irrepressible silicon concierge is
up to his tricks in interplanetary hijinks. The special effects are now
classics.

Acapulco Gold: Legendary Mexican marijuana from the 60s.
Today it wouldn’t be considered so special, but back then it was great!

Acid: see
LSD.

Acid Tests: Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters did the first
Acid Tests. These were events were everyone dropped acid together
for an extraordinary group experience. Tom Wolfe wrote The Electric
Kool-Aid Acid Test about the experiences of Ken Kesey the Merry Pranksters.

Activist: A person who participates in protest actions.
Anyone involved in a cause, usually political.

Afterglow: A state of peace that can follow after a psychedelic
experience when your mind is still detached from worldly concerns.
He’s bathing in the afterglow of his last LSD trip.

Agnew, Spiro T.: Vice President during Nixon’s reign, he antagonized
almost everyone but expecially liberals with his verbal rantings.
He claimed the antiwar movement was the work of an effete corps of impudent
snobs. He survived a bribery scandal but was convicted of income tax evasion
he was forced to resign much to everyone’s delight. Recently declassifed
FBI files show Agnew did receive hundreds of thousands of dollars in kickbacks
as Govenor and Vice President.

Allman
Brothers:
Southern rock Band popular in the early 70s, played the Fillmore.
Midnight Rider, Melissa, Ramblin’ Man some of their hits.

Altamont: Controversial, ill fated rock concert headlined by
the Rolling Stones and Jefferson Airplane at Altamont Speedway on Dec.24,
1969. Hells Angels, acting as security, had their hands full as people
kept rushing the stage. One man pulled a gun, and the Angels killed him.
The film Gimme Shelter documenting the concert was used in evidence to
clear the Angels.

Antiwar Movement: The organized resistance by students, veterans
and other activists against the draft and Vietnam War in the 1960s and
early ’70s. Rallies, marches, speeches, teach-ins, sit-ins, slogans, banners,
and songs were some of the non-violent tactics used to get the message
out.

Asanas: Sanskrit word. A series of body postures that stretch
and tone muscles, increase endurance, and improve flexibility. Along with
breathing and meditation they make up the practice of Hatha Yoga.

Ashram: A monastery where monks practice yoga.

Astral Plane: A dimension of existence beyond the physical world.
A place where disembodied spirits dwell. Many attempt to contact the astral
plane through meditation or by using psychic energy.

Babe: Affectionate term for female, now with
slightly different meaning.

Baby: Similar to Babe.

Bad Acid: Poorly made LSD, probably cut with speed which causes
a bad trip. Some people at Woodstock downed some bad acid and the
crowd was warned about it, making the term instantly popular.

Bad Trip: An LSD trip that goes awry. Usually indicated
by paranoia, or intense, uncontrollable feelings or rarely suicidal urges.
Also used to describe any bad experience.

Baez, Joan: Singer, songwriter, antiwar activist, Joan went to
jail for her participation in antiwar rallies.

Bag: What you’re into. Your profession/obsession.
What you enjoy. I hear your bag’s nude meditation on acid!

Ball: To have sex. I hear Mountain’s been balling your old girlfriend
Harmony.

Ban the Bomb: Slogan calling for the end of nuclear weapons.
The hippies were a generation raised in fear of THE BOMB. Trained
as children to hide under school desks in air raid drills, they grew up
to understand there was no hiding from nuclear war.

Ban the Bra: Slogan symbolizing the Feminist Movement, women’s
rights and the sexual liberation of the 60s.

Beat Generation: See Beatniks Term coined by Jack Kerouac.


BuyBeatles,
The:
John, Paul, George and Ringo. Does anyone NOT know who these
guys are? That is a testament to how great this band was. Originally
from Liverpool, England the Beatles took America by storm in 1964.
It was the start of what became known as The British Invasion. They went
on to record some of the most popular singles and albums in history.
There was something about the synergy of their talents and their willingness
to push the music experience in new directions that took us all on a Magical
Mystery Tour we can never forget.

Beatlemania: Used to describe the virtual hysteria that accompanied
the Beatles on their tours. Also refers to the successful marketing
of the Beatles, their records and other products.

Beatniks: Derived from the term beat, beatniks were the precursors
of the hippies. This tribe included authors Allen Ginsberg, Jack
Kerouac, William S. Burroughs and others who believed the essence in life
is to follow your desires and experience all life has to offer. The
beat music scene included jazz, folk and the emerging rock music.
Beatniks had hangouts like Greenwich Village in New York when they weren’t
On the Road. Beatniks experimented with unusual living arrangements,
drugs, and innovative art. Word attributed to Herb Caen, a San Francisco
columnist describing the Beat Generation in 1958.

Beautiful People: Used to describe hippies or cool persons.

Bean bag chair: A big amorphous chair covered with Naugahyde
vinyl (or leather or other material)…usually filled with little styrofoam
balls. You could sit in it and it would shape itself to you.
They were very comfortable and relaxing.

Be-In: One of the first gatherings of
hippies, January 14, 1967 at the Polo field in Golden Gate Park. It was
called A Gathering of the Tribes. In attendance were the Grateful
Dead, the Jefferson Airplane, Timothy Leary, Allen Ginsberg, and thousands
of stoned hippies with painted faces, beads, bells, robes, etc. The
Diggers were there giving out free food. There was no big reason
to be there, other than to be there, hence a Be-In. An event where
you groove on everyone else.

Bellbottoms: Pants with wide bell shaped
legs worn by hippies.
Bought as cheap clothing at Army/Navy surplus
stores, these were NAVY issued denim pants for sailors, once they caught
on they were popularized to the point that major manufacturers made them.

Benzedrine: ‘Bennies’..’Pep Pills’ ‘Uppers’. Used
as diet pills, these became abused as mood elevators.

Berkeley: The primary campus of the University of California
at Berkeley. The origin of the Free Speech movement where the students
confronted the University’s policies regarding the right to be vocal and
politically active on campus property. One of the centers of the
protest movement in the 60’s. Sproul Plaza was a gathering place
for the protests.

Birkenstocks – These are sandals that were all the rage in the
early 70’s. They are shaped to your foot and toes with a fair amount
of support. Unfortunately they’re not for everyone, as I could never get
a pair that felt right for my feet.

BuyBlack
Muslim Movement:
Black separatist movement advocating racial
division and separation from White society. Two of these developed. One
was under Elijah Muhammed. Malcolm X was part of this movement and chose
to splinter off into a separate movement when he found himself in disagreement
with Elijah Muhammed over the approach to separatism, Islam, and religious
philosophy.

Black Panthers: Armed, radical black political
action group. Panthers were a response to the victimization of Black people
by the white majority. It’s leaders were imprisoned on various charges.
See
Black Power

Black Power: Attributed to Stokely Carmichael who used it to
encourage blacks to attain more political clout. For a time
this was a uniting theme among black people in the U.S. It became
a rallying cry for action against the racial injustice of the 50s and 60s.
Black activists were ready to fight the system. Huey Newton, Bobby
Seal, Eldridge Cleaver of the Black Panthers, Stokely Carmichael, Dick
Gregory and Angela Davis were leaders in this radical movement. Some
advocated revolution and the overthrow of the U.S. government. The
Black Power movement struck fear into the heart of America’s bigots and
all the leaders were soon in jail, sometimes on trumped up charges, sometimes
on real crimes. In any case the movement fractured, but the legacy
of radical black activism had left its mark on America’s psyche.

Black is Beautiful!: Slogan used to instill pride among black
Americans.

BuyBlacklight:
A special purple light that causes certain colored paint to glow brightly
in the dark. Found in head shops, they are used to add a psychedelic
effect to posters and body paints.

Blast: A really great party or time. British origin?
We had a blast at the Stones concert!

Blind
Faith:
Rock group with Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker from Cream and Steve
Winwood from Traffic. Famous album cover shown.

Blotter: A type of LSD on assorted colorful paper, cut into small
doses.

Blow: Cocaine. To waste something. Don’t blow your dough
on that Schwag.

Blow Your Mind: Surprise you in a mind expanding way by something
unbelievable. She really blew my mind with that head trip.

Bong: A long cylindrical tube with a bowl,
used to smoke marijuana tobacco or other substances.

Body Paint: To paint designs, words or slogans on one’s body
parts. Usually in wild patterns and often in paints that would glow under
Blacklight. Body painting wasn’t invented in the 60’s. Its a very old form
of decoration.

Bogart: To hog a joint while others are waiting. Term refers
to Humphrey Bogart, who usually had a cigarette dangling from his mouth.

Brand, Stewart: Produced the Whole Earth Catalog, The Trips Festival,
founded The WELL, the Point Foundation, Global Business Network, the Long
Now Foundation, the Co-Evolution Quarterly, on the board of directors of
the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Bread: Money. Hey man, gotta any bread for the groceries?

Bring Down: Something or someone that ruins your day, and makes
you lose your high. My ol’ man’s bringin’ me down.

Bro: Used to describe any male friend. Usually someone
you can trust. A brother.

Buds: Not beer, but cannabis flowers.

Bug: To bother someone. Quit buggin’ me!

Bummer: A bad thing.

Bum Trip: See Bad Trip.

Bunk: Bad drugs (fake not real like bunk doses).

Bunker: Someone who sells fake drugs, rips people off.

Burn: To get ripped off. I got burned on that dope deal.
Also to get mad. I’m all burned up about that dope deal!

Burn Baby Burn!: Slogan used to describe rioting during Black
uprisings in U.S. cities during the civil strife of the late 60s. Detroit,
Watts, Chicago, Cleveland and other cities experienced days of rioting
and arson. See the Hippyland
Calendar
for what happened when.

Burn-out: Too many drugs, unable to handle a situation that has
gotten too familiar. Wasted feelings of repeatition. Inability to function.

Burroughs,
William S. :
Beat author wrote autobiographical Naked Lunch about
his life as a drug addict, murderer and homosexual. Other books include
Junky and Queer. Burroughs’ thing was personal freedom. To him
this meant breaking all the rules, which he did whenever he could. Burroughs’
talent is undeniable. Depite (or because of?) being a junkie, he
was able to convey what it’s like to be living on the dark edge of reality.
His intake of all sorts of drugs obviously inspired some people to experiment.
Many beats and hippies can relate to Burroughs’ life situation as a social
outcast from mainstream American society (remember much of this happened
in the 50’s). Burroughs wrote about those things that no other writer
of his time (except Allen Ginsberg) would consider suitable subjects.
Indeed the publishing and subsequent banning of Naked Lunch turned into
a landmark case for free speech in America. Burroughs influenced many around
him including other authors and musicians.

Busted: To get arrested. Did you hear? Joe
got busted for loitering.


BuyByrds,
The:
David Crosby, Roger McGuinn, and Barry McGuire took everybody
Eight Miles High while Mr. Tambourine Man played a song for us on our record
players (remember them?).

Posted by: skip
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