2 hours
The Berkeley Alembic
Free Tickets Available
Wed, 07 May, 2025 at 07:00 pm to 09:00 pm (GMT-07:00)
The Berkeley Alembic
2820 Seventh Street, Berkeley, United States
The Chalice is a recurring psychedelic salon held at the Berkeley Alembic the first Wednesday of every month. Instead of the mainstream focus on clinical trials, legal frameworks, and psychotherapy, the Chalice will draw from the deeper humanistic wells of history, poetry, the gods, ethnobotany, humor, and mystery. We are less interested in fetishizing psychedelic substances or psychedelic experiences than in cultivating psychedelic culture and exploring what it means to be psychedelic people.
Join the Chalice crew in welcoming the visionary psychospiritual author and filmmaker Ayize Jama-Everett. We predict a transformative conversation touching on liminal spaces, myths, and identities. How might liminal or "in-between" zones—where fixed identities dissolve and new possibilities emerge—serve as powerful arenas for creative liberation and self-discovery? Drawing from a shared interest in the parallels between improvisational music and mystical exploration, Jama-Everett and the Chalice crew will highlight how artists like Sun Ra, Miles Davis, Alice Coltrane, and Jimi Hendrix embodied liminality through spontaneous musical innovation. Improvisation is inherently “in-between": it thrives in uncertainty, challenges boundaries, and births revolutionary expressions. Tonight's vibrant discussion will also explore Afrofuturism’s celebration of Black surreal realities, ancestral mythologies, non-dystopian technofutures, and psychedelic experiences as tools for reframing identity, weirding reality, and building pathways to personal and communal healing.
This first half of this event will be streamed online.
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The co-hosts for Chalice are Erik Davis, author and Alembic co-founder; Maria Mangini, co-founder of the Women’s Visionary Council and old-school head; and Christian Greer, currently a lecturer on counterculture at Stanford University. The first half of each gathering will feature a talk or special guest interview; the second half of the evening is designed to develop the community, sometimes with breakout groups, story hours, and peer-to-peer discussion, and always with more questions than answers.
Ayize Jama-Everett is an author, educator, community therapist, and advocate at the forefront of exploring psychedelics, Afrofuturism, and social justice. With a background spanning psychology, divinity, and creative writing, Ayize uniquely blends therapeutic insights with cultural storytelling, positioning him among leading voices highlighting Black communities' roles in the psychedelic movement. As an educator and therapist for over two decades, Ayize has taught at various educational levels and worked closely with adolescents, individuals in drug rehabilitation, and youthful offenders in juvenile detention centers, emphasizing personal transformation through storytelling and self-discovery.
Actively involved in championing inclusivity within psychedelic spaces, Ayize serves as a board member of Access to Doorways, advocating for Queer and BIPOC participation, and advises organizations such as Psychedelics Today, UC Berkeley’s Center for Psychedelic Science, and the California Institute of Integral Studies. He produced the groundbreaking documentary , exploring Black identity and psychedelic experiences, and his essays appear in outlets like the LA Review of Books, The Believer, and Racebaitr. Through teaching, counseling, writing, advocacy, and producing, Ayize Jama-Everett continues to illuminate paths toward mental wellness, social justice, and cultural awakening.
Erik Davis, PhD, is an author, award-winning journalist, and teacher based in San Francisco. His wide-ranging work focuses on alternative religion, media culture, the popular imagination, and the psychedelic underground. He is the author of High Weirdness: Drugs, Esoterica, and Visionary Experience in the Seventies (2019); Nomad Codes: Adventures in Modern Esoterica (2010); The Visionary State: A Journey through California’s Spiritual Landscape (2006), a critical volume on Led Zeppelin (2005), and the celebrated cult classic TechGnosis: Myth, Magic, and Mysticism in the Age of Information (1998), which remains in print. Davis’s scholarly and popular essays on music, technoculture, drugs, and spirituality have appeared in scores of books, magazines, and journals, and his writing has been translated into a dozen languages. Davis has spoken widely at universities, conferences, retreat centers, and festivals, and has been interviewed by CNN, the BBC, NPR, and the New York Times. He graduated from Yale University in 1988, and earned his PhD in religious studies at Rice University in 2015. He writes the online publication the Burning Shore (www.burningshore.com), and his next book is Blotter: the Untold Story of an Acid Medium (2024).www.techgnosis.com
Mariavittoria Mangini, PhD, FNP has written extensively on the impact of psychedelic experiences in shaping the lives of her contemporaries, and has worked closely with many of the most distinguished investigators in this field. She is one of the founders of the Women’s Visionary Council, a nonprofit organization that supports investigations into non-ordinary forms of consciousness and organizes gatherings of researchers, healers, artists, and activists whose work explores these states. She is a visiting scholar at the Berkeley Center for the Science of Psychedelics, and Professor Emerita in the School of Science, Allied Health, and Nursing at Holy Names University. For the last 50 years, she has been a part of the Hog Farm, a well-known communal family based in Berkeley and in Laytonville, California.
Dr. J. Christian Greer is a scholar of Religious Studies with a special focus on psychedelic culture. He holds a MDiv from Harvard Divinity School, as well as a MA and PhD (cum laude) in Western Esotericism from the University of Amsterdam. While a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard Divinity School, he led a series of research seminars on global psychedelic spirituality, which culminated in the creation of the Harvard Psychedelic Walking Tour, a free audio guide detailing how the Harvard community has shaped the modern history of psychedelic culture. His latest book, Kumano Kodo: Pilgrimage to Powerspots (co-authored with Dr. Michelle Oing) analyzes the pilgrimage folklore associated with the rainforests of Japan's Kii Peninsula. His forthcoming book, Angelheaded Hipsters: Psychedelic Militancy in Nineteen Eighties North America (Oxford University Press), explores the expansion of psychedelic culture within fanzine networks in the late Cold War era. He has held teaching positions at Harvard University, Yale University, and Stanford University. Along with Dr. Erik Davis, he organizes an intensive summer school course, "The Psychedelic Universe: Global Perspectives on Higher Consciousness,” that will launch at the University of Amsterdam in July, 2024.
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Tickets for The Chalice: Improvising the Mystery can be booked here.
Ticket type | Ticket price |
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In-Person Donation | Free |
Livestream Donation | Free |
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The Berkeley Alembic Foundation
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