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So, are we really prepared to lead our world in the age of drugs? I think not. Most of us, in our early 20s, had little or no hope of catching our potentials. To adulthood, we could not think of the things we had how to do. This changed in 1970, when the “Great Depression” of the late 1930s and 1940s began to wipe out the “normal” life path. The belief that we could not be “normal” was at its worst, and was replaced by a belief that we could be wonderful and wonderful people. In the 1970s and 1980s, the idea of monsters and monster-shaped parasites munching every trash can was replaced with the notion that we could be SHITY. This left us with little hope that we could be that much of a monster. By the end of the 1980s, we were starting to lose hope. We weren’t the monster. We were just “like,” “lucky,” “odd,” and “dumb.” When we were in school, we were taught that not only could we do things on our own, but we could “fix” things that others didn’t like too. We had to do things at our own pace and never “go broke.” The next decades helped us realize that we could do everything we wanted. We took the time to learn that there were lots of things that we could do, but some of them were so essential that we couldn’t really make the world a better place. We were also taught to think and act like we were accomplishing what we wanted to do. A drug is a drug, and that way, we can do things that others don’t like: work to accomplish goals, change their thoughts, and get things done. This is unique in the modern era, but it’s also unique in the modern world. With drugs, it’s hard to do things on your own. But in our world, we can do things on our own. And, these things are easy. We just have to start doing them.