How Is Tribhuwan Kapur's Hippies Counter Culture

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Tribhuwan Kapur’s Hippies- A Study of the Drug Habits and Sexual Customs Counter Culture Generation of the 60s The 60s was a complete different view on how society is based on today. The people themselves were different, their behaviors were rare and their hobbies were uncommon. The article “A Study of the Drug Habits and Sexual Content” by Tribhuwan Kapur defines the generation of counterculture during the 60s. Over time people have changed tremendously. In the 60s people weren't the same opposed to the way they are today. During that time is where the hippies began to evolve. The 1960s defines what hippies are really considered to be, they were young, had long hair, wore colorful clothing, headbands, tie dyed shirts, flared jeans, and …show more content…

They organized their own groups to help keep their communities clean when the government wasn’t, they protested against companies that polluted the environment, companies that caused harm such as creating weapons or using animals for animal testing on products. Their relationship with earth was unexplainable; they planted their own foods, and really cared for the little things around them. Hippies weren’t always relaxed and calm they too had behaved wild at times. When they weren’t protesting for the environment they were spreading love. Their way of spreading love was really not the way they made it seem. They didn’t go around speaking about it they actually acted upon it. Their sexual experiments were way different from normal experiences you’d expect from those who weren’t hippies. They had wild sex orgies and practiced free love almost anywhere no matter the time or day. The concept of waiting till marriage had just been thrown out the window once the free love generation came around. If it wasn’t taking care of the planet or having groups of sex they were doing drugs. The common drug was LSD, since it wasn’t expensive it was easy to get hold of. Hippies usually used drugs at concerts or parties. Taking drugs was their way of expressing themselves (Page 40,