Human Touch

The Making of a People

Eyes in their skin

To mitigate dangers in generalized touching, the Egyptians, for example, used aporphine from the Blue Lotus to place “eyes in their skin.” They believed in the primacy of touch and aporphine to enhance their psychological proprioception, enabling them to "see" using haptic communication to detect deception, deceit, distrust, and doubt during touch exchanges.

The Counterculture of the 1960s used psychedelics similarly to uncover the false narrative of the 'American Dream.' The Colorful Prince's collective follows suit with their use of psychedelics to witness and isolate duplicity and fraud during touching.

Still, the benefits of indirect reciprocity far outweigh the negatives when considering its effect on unequal power dynamics in intimate social relations.

Indirect reciprocity reconfigures how participants, who are otherwise unequal in power and status, perceive each other. The negative effects of power and status inequality are set aside. Haptic association is an equalizer, which will, over time, change the social power structure itself. This is the power of the human touch, the change most feared.

The hope and promise of the Colorful Prince lie in a belief in the human touch. That touch can take many forms and promote physical and psychological well-being. And a warm, loving touch can lead to positive, regenerative social contacts.