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November 17, 2015 08:42 am PST

The unusual couple behind an online field guide to psychoactive substances

PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDREW B. MYERS FOR THE NEW YORKER / HAND LETTERING BY MOUSECAKE

In the New Yorker's annual tech issue, Emily Witt profiles the founders of Erowid, "a couple in their mid-forties -- a man and a woman who call themselves Earth and Fire, respectively."

In The Trip Planners (p.58), Emily Witt examines the twenty-year-old Web site Erowids place in Americas drug culture, as an expansive catalogue of hundreds of psychoactive substances, and a primary resource for recreational users and toxicologists alike. When Erowid launched, in 1995, it served as a repository of drug-culture esoterica, drawing just a few clicks a day. Today, Erowid contains highly detailed proles of more than three hundred and fty psychoactive substances, from caeine to methamphetamine, Witt writes, noting that its mission is to provide and facilitate access to objective, accurate, and non-judgmental information about psychoactive substances. Last year, the site had at least seventeen million unique visitors. In February, Reddit users deemed it the fourth-most-worthy nonprot out of more than eight thousand candidatesahead of NPRand granted the site a donation of more than eighty thousand dollars. Witt speaks extensively with the sites foundersa man and a woman who call themselves Earth and Fire, respectively. We turned out to be the kind of people who like to research something rst, Fire says, regarding their personal approach to drugs, and explaining their motivation for starting the site. Fire continues, And it turned out to be impossible. Witt notes that, in their role as early Internet pioneers, Earth and Fire sought to be seen as the straights among the weirdos and the weirdos among the straights. Earth and Fire themselves are not heavy drug usersthey say that they have tried LSD, MDMA, and psilocybin mushrooms, but not cocaine, heroin, or meth. One reason theyhavent tried opiates themselves, Fire says, is that Erowids legacy would take a nosedive if one of them were to die of an overdose. But the site does not unequivocally advise against taking opioids or any other drug, no matter how dangerous or addictive, a stance that has earned it some critics. Fire says that harm reduction is a goal for the site, but not a primary one. We are developing a library, not a personal-use guide, Earth says.

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