Sunday, May 02, 2010

Retrospective

I looked over my blogging history last winter. Some of the things I wrote years ago seemed so inane that I removed some of them, left others, but the result is that I don't have the desire to blog that I started out with. And if I do blog, I prefer to quote material rather than paraphrase it, or talk about my interpretation. I can still keep posting seeds of ideas that may be of value to me later.

I haven't entered a single conversation between Ayn Rand's cat and Gurdjieff's dog. They have been talking about the goal of man's existence recently. Is my failure to blog about this over the last 5 years an example starting out with an intention and finding it reversing itself?

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Being Observed?

Today I discovered that I have a "follower." This follower appears authentic in the sense that is does not seem to be computer generated.

The feeling of having a follower of this blog stimulates a different sense of what I may write. I had been writing for two people, myself, and web-crawlers. Now I wonder, what would I write for anyone else?

I'll let this cook in my "subconscious" for a while, ponder it.

Fourth Way Seminar in September 2010

Seminar

Theme to be Announced

Friday, September 3 to Monday, September 6, 2010
San Juan Bautista, California

(1 hour from San Jose Airport)

Through guided meditation, Conscious Body-Breath Impressions™, dialogue and private interviews, William Patrick Patterson explores the theme. Open to all levels of simplicity. No previous experience necessary.

Because space is limited and past seminars have filled quickly, please make your reservation early. The total cost of tuition, lodging (double occupancy) and meals is $575 with reservations received by August 15, 2010. Afterward, the cost is $675. Space is reserved with a deposit of $300.

To reserve a place, send your deposit by mail or reserve electronically below. There is a small surcharge when using the latter.

To reserve a place by mail, send a check made out to Arete Communications to the following address:

Arete Communications
773 Center Boulevard #58
Fairfax, CA 94978-0058

If you have questions, email us at: Introduction@Gurdjieff-Legacy.Org or call (800) 470-3086

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

The Five Being Obligolnian Strivings of Ashiata Shiemash

The Five Being Obligolnian Strivings of Ashiata Shiemash (All and Everything by G.I. Gurdjieff, page 385.)

And this took place as follows: "All the beings of that planet then began to work in order to have in their consciousness this divine function of genuine Conscience, and for this purpose, as everywhere in the Universe, they transubstantiated in themselves what are called the 'being-obligolnian strivings' of which there are five, namely:

First Striving: "To have in their ordinary being-existence everything satisfying and really necessary for their planetary body."

Second Striving: "To have a constant and unflagging instinctive need for self-perfection in the sense of being."

Third Striving: "The conscious striving to know ever more and more concerning the laws of World-creation and World-maintenance."

Fourth Striving: "The striving from the beginning of their existence to pay for their arising and their individuality as quickly possible, in order afterwards to be free to lighten as much as possible the Sorrow of our Common Father."

Fifth Striving: "The striving always to assist the most rapid perfecting of other beings, both those similar to oneself and those of other forms, up to the degree of the sacred Martfotai, that is, up to the degree of self-individuality."

Friday, March 19, 2010

Jean Vaysse, Student of the Gurdfieff Teaching

Vayasse, Jean (1917-1975) was born in Le Mans, France (1). In his ordinary life Jean Vaysse participated during the 1950s et '60s in the great discoveries of modern surgery: renal grafts, cardiopulmonary bypasses, and surgery for arterial hypertension. (2) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11255978

"His quest to understand the meaning of life brought him in 1947 to an encounter with the teaching of Gurdjieff. Working in the groups in Paris and later helping to lead them through the 1960s, Jean Vaysse felt the time had come to express Gurdjieff's written teaching in a more coherent and logical way in order to bring it within the range of the average educated reader." (1) "Jean Vaysse was a long time pupil of Jeanne de Salzmann." (3) http://gurdjieff.org.au/resources.html

"Working in the groups in Paris and later helping to lead them through the 1960s, Jean Vaysse felt the time had come to express Gurdjieff's written teaching in a more coherent and logical way in order to bring it within the range of the average educated reader." (1) He wrote "Toward Awakening: An Approach to the Teaching Left by Gurdjieff."

Jean Vaysse helped produce the film documentary:

Georges Gurdjieff

A Documentary Film

Produced by Jean-Claude Lubtchansky

(4) http://www.gurdjieff.org/lubtchansky1.htm

Jean Vaysse is best known for his book,

Toward Awakening: An Approach to the Teaching Left by Gurdjieff (1979) San Francisco: Harper & Row, ISBN 1-85063-115-8

Very little has been written about Jean Vaysse outside of his medical accomplishments and brief mentions of him in conversations of the Fourth Way.

References:

(1) Toward Awakening: An Approach to the Teaching Brought by Gurdjieff by Jean Vaysse (Hardcover - Mar. 17, 2009) ISBN: 978 1 59675 030 2 , page 159

(2) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11255978

(3) http://gurdjieff.org.au/resources.html

(4) http://www.gurdjieff.org/lubtchansky1.htm

Kathryn Hulme (July 6, 1900 - August 25, 1981) was born in San Francisco

Kathryn Hulme (July 6, 1900 - August 25, 1981) was born in San Francisco. She survived the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906. (1) She died in Kauai. (2) She is best known for her book The Nun's Story that was later made into a movie starring Audrey Hepburn. Kathryn said that "Between the lines of that biography is the story of my own years of inner struggle with the 'Gurdjieffian' work aim." (3) Her book Undiscovered Country includes descriptions of her association with Gurdjieff, his students and his Work.

Kathryn Hulme started studying the ideas of Gurdjieff with Jane Heap in 1931. She first met Gurdjieff in Paris February 1932. She recognized him in the Café de la Paix from the descriptions that she had heard of him from Jane Heap. She introduced herself to him. (4) She spent several months pursuing him to teach her. When Jane Heap left for London on October 18th, Kathryn went straight to the Café de la Paix and entreated Gurdjieff to take her as a student. Gurdjieff nicknamed her Crocodile on the evening of October 18th, 1935. (5) Kathryn and her friends became a unique group of women studying with Gurdjieff. They were called "The Rope." She met routinely with Gurdjieff until May 3rd 1937 when she had her last lunch with him. (6)

During the years before his death she made several visits to Gurdjieff. She visited him in July-August 1938 in when she was in Paris for three weeks. (7) She visited him with other students when he came to NYC in spring 1939 until May19th.(8) In July of 1945 she visited him for a few hours in Paris.(9) In June 1946 she visited him and brought her friend, Marie Louise Habets, who was the subject of the biography, A Nun's Story. (10) She last saw him alive in 1948 at Christmas when Gurdjieff came to New York. (11)

Kathryn Hulme is a key person in the historical account Ladies of the Rope by William Patrick Patterson.


Kathryn Hulme's books:

We lived as children. Reference: http://lccn.loc.gov/38027542

The Nun's Story
Undiscovered Country: A Spiritual Adventure
Annie's Captain
The Wild Place
Au risque de se perdre
Merry Christmas, Mr. Baxter
The Success
The Diamond Hitch
The Sleeping Partner
La Història d'una monja
Arab Interlude
Look a Lion in the Eye: On Safari Through Africa

Desert Night




Footnote:
  1. Undiscovered Country by Kathryn Hulme, Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1966, page 6.
  2. Ladies of the Rope by William Patrick Patterson, Fairfax California, Arete Communications, page 246.
  3. Undiscovered Country, page 1.
  4. Undiscovered Country, page 60.
  5. Undiscovered Country, page 74.
  6. Ladies of the Rope page 129.
  7. Undiscovered Country page 162.
  8. Undiscovered Country page 173.
  9. Undiscovered Country page 211.
  10. Undiscovered Country page 254.
  11. Ladies of the Rope, page 185.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

The new Gurdjieff Journal is out!



Read below.

The Gurdjieff Journal

Current Issue - #51 Volume 13 Issue 3


Certainty in a Time of Uncertainty

The financial meltdown, doomsday scenarios, the Mayan Calendar's 2012—how to come to certainty with so much uncertainty?

Gurdjieff & Food
Part I

The prolongation of human life is key in developing higher levels of being and bodies. What part does physical food play? What did Gurdjieff serve at his table?

In Search of The Soul
Part IX
Buddhism
Part I

The continuing exploration of how different religions and paths view the soul.