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9942


Date: December 18, 2023 at 13:12:53
From: mr bopp, [DNS_Address]
Subject: chatter about my methods


been a lot of it over the years regarding my fairness and/or treating people equally...this and that about what are the "rules"...let me be clear, there are no real hard set "rules", only some vaguely stated guidelines...there is no way to treat a group of vastly different "individuals" equally, when it is obvious the individuals are not "equals", except in the greater sense of our ignorance...but here are a few things to think about next time you feel the need to complain about my moderating "style"...

as the wise guide said:, "I can not help you develop, I can create the conditions in which you can develop yourself".

"It is insanity to speak of beings as if they were capable of acting consciously; and if one does act consciously, who is there to understand such action?"

"A mystery is something that cannot be expressed, something beyond human comprehension."

merry christmas boppers and a blessed new year...try to remember yourselves...


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9952


Date: December 19, 2023 at 11:06:32
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


I see a gradual improvement here and welcome it ...
happy holidays to one and all whatever your faith or
lack thereof ... to quote Rodney King, "Can't we all
just get along?"


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None


9946


Date: December 18, 2023 at 19:25:41
From: Nevada, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


...as the wise guide said:, "I can not help you develop,
I can create the conditions in which you can develop
yourself".

Exactly bopp: All of us posting here over the past
couple decades have been doing exactly that. It's the
very reason I have stayed (overstayed?) my visit.

I assume you're still allowing me to contribute on Tech
and problem resolution page.

I look forward to all of us having a Merry and loving
Christmas whether we were created equally or just
treated equally as the creator would expect of each of
us.

It's my wish and hope all the Boppers will eventually
leave these boards better for the experiences.


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9948


Date: December 18, 2023 at 22:02:23
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


Happy happy Nevada.. nice to see you around.. I miss hanging with your
lizards.. wish them well for me.. ;)


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9949


Date: December 18, 2023 at 22:28:33
From: Nevada, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


thanks ao...

Lizards mostly dormant, Doves, Chipmonks, pack rats and
Christmas Bunnies still up for the Holidays.

Maybe if you ask Santa Clause nicely he'll let me
comment on some of your posts that I'm still allowed to
freely read.

Just for the record, do you think we were all created
equally or is that something that was just made up
temporarily for the American Bill of Rights way back
when?

If you really miss our "interaction", look me up on
Bible and Religion and I'll be happy to engage in
appropriate but caring dialogue with you.


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9956


Date: December 19, 2023 at 19:50:51
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


Me, on religion? Oy! I think religion is a manipulative tool used to control the
masses.. and I doubt Chas wants me crashing his party. Really Nev, Im
convinced what god really wants from us is CO2 and excrement. And yeah,
on that note, we are all created equal. Inhale, exhale, eat and excrete, we all
do it, and in pretty much equal measure. Beyond that? Equal? I suppose in
some universe thats a possibility but in reality, here on this plane, on this
planet, forks are created all sorts of ways and none of it is equal. Though, I
agree with our constitutions attempt at creating an equal plane for all from
a civil point of view. But, even so, I certainly cant see how all are actually
created equal. The bigger question, I imagine, would be how to adjudicate
the differences?

As to religion.. you see, Nev, I dont think mans able to comprehend god to
any degree in which he, we, could define the moral rights and wrongs of
creations way of looking at things. Think of it man, we ain't got anywhere
near enough gray matter to fathom something that immense. Were the
preverbal ant on the foot of an elephant. And a bunch of mumble jumble
founded on fairytales doesnt cut it. Whereas, I agree there is a creator, and
I agree in the power of faith, and I agree we can attain all sorts of heights,
but is it a given? I doubt it..

And as just an aside. I have had the opportunity to befriend lots of hawks in
the wild. For whatever reason they come to me. Literally man wild Io
(Hawaiian hawks) have shown up and hung out with me for years. And I tell
you, of all the animals I have befriend.. lots of pets, farm animals, and some
in the wild, I never could comprehend what was going on in the mind of a
hawk. I had one that would talk its fool head off.. for hours it would talk to
me.. and I never once thought I had an inkling of what that buggah was
saying. But it did give me an opportunity to consider the eat life to be alive
concept. And it baffles the shit out of me. And it stands the thou shall not
kill concept on its head. On the physical plane.

On the other hand I think were here, in this lifetime, on this plane, to wrestle
with the animal within and find a way to free ourselves from its shackles. To
become our better selves, our angels, and ascend, and thou shall not kill a
clue on the path one must walk to get there..

But me go on about that kine stuff in Charlie's world? I doubt hed
appreciate my take on all that.. but hey, let me know if I am wrong.


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9958


Date: December 19, 2023 at 21:12:46
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


sleep...eat...fornicate...secrete...repeat...


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[9959]


9959


Date: December 19, 2023 at 22:09:08
From: Nevada, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


sleep...eat...fornicate...secrete...repeat...

...did you purposely omit "repent"?

We seem to be getting close to the bottom of the cracker
barrel.


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None


9957


Date: December 19, 2023 at 20:09:35
From: Nevada, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


ao, this was one of best posts I have seen on EB in a
very long time. I think the Bible and Religion board
would be a perfect choice to discuss many of the points
you brought up.

I suggest you repost it there and see what Charles says.
I suspect he will be quite open to giving you a trial
run to see if you can live up to God's expectations and
take all of us with you.

I hope to see you there soon...

...kind of like Christmas a few days early.

Does it snow on Christmas in your neighborhood? Love
your animal experiences...

...quite special actually.


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None


9943


Date: December 18, 2023 at 15:18:35
From: old timer, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


there is no way to treat a group of vastly different "individuals" equally,
when it is obvious the individuals are not "equals"

sounds like the stated reason for discrimination against different
groups over the years. most of the civilized world believes in treating
everyone equally even knowing we arent all equals

merry christmas bopp and the few people still here!


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9944


Date: December 18, 2023 at 15:55:11
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


well of course that is how you would see it ot..it is the self-centered viewpoint of the masses...but what it really means is that each person has to be considered on a case by case basis, addressing their specific needs as best can...


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9945


Date: December 18, 2023 at 17:23:59
From: old timer , [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


yes, the masses have never liked being told they werent being treated
fairly because they werent really equals. dont worry about it, we are
used to being told we arent equals or being treated fairly

merry christmas


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9953


Date: December 19, 2023 at 11:19:37
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


i remember one thing gurdjieff said...if you're defending your position, you're wrong...lol...


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9955


Date: December 19, 2023 at 12:36:27
From: Nevada, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


...if you're defending your position, you're wrong...

...unless you do it respectfully, with compassion, and
with a willingness to adjust your beliefs as time and
circumstances require.

The concepts of "right or wrong" are probably not as
important as the concept of eventual self realization of
the creators role in creation.


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None


9954


Date: December 19, 2023 at 11:44:34
From: old timer , [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


Many people, especially ignorant people, want to punish you for
speaking the truth, for being correct, for being you. Never apologize for
being correct, or for being years ahead of your time. If youre right and
you know it, speak your mind. Speak your mind. Even if you are a minority
of one, the truth is still the truth. gandhi


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9961


Date: December 20, 2023 at 20:19:22
From: blindhog 6th sense, [DNS_Address]
Subject: ryan's guide, gurdjieff, is REALLY Dumb...Which Explains a Lot(NT)


(NT)


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9982


Date: December 21, 2023 at 12:08:39
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


And what, pray tell, is your take on the organ Kundabuffer? Have we
really freed ourselves of its shackles? Or, perchance, are we still
suffering under its influence?


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9983


Date: December 21, 2023 at 13:32:33
From: old timer, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


personally have not read him but i am curious if it is his teaching that
taught you and bopp to be so intolerant and disrespectful of others?? did
he write anything about the indiscriminate slaughter of women and
children?


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9984


Date: December 21, 2023 at 14:23:22
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?

URL: http://earthboppin.net/gigurdjieff/


Maybe you should read.. or if you're into it listen to.. follow the link above.. who knows, you might learn something..


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10000


Date: December 23, 2023 at 11:52:28
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


having read Meetings With Remarkable Men, I bought that
book, what a preposterous load of excrement ... silly
man ... he wrote a comedy for simpletons to swallow


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10006


Date: December 23, 2023 at 16:03:15
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


Seeings as you have rejected Meetings With.. which I would suggest has
more meaning if you were to read the series in order.. and you really should
let the first sink in a while before you move on to Meetings, which is the
second of three books.. I'll suggest two books that are central to the way I'm
thinking lately georg..

Change We Must, by Nana Veary and Hank Wessellman's Spiritwalker,
together form a reasonable view on how I'm seeing things these days..

Change is out of print but you should be able to find it on the net, whereas I
imagine Hanks Spiritwalker is still in circulation..

Happy reading!


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None


10003


Date: December 23, 2023 at 14:04:43
From: old timer, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


im admittedly curious, but with bopp and ao being 2 of the least self
aware people ive run across i dont have high expectations. the teachings
sound a bit narcissistic, which does explain a lot


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10009


Date: December 24, 2023 at 11:03:36
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


Gurdjieff has one sentence in his book that resonates
with me ... it's the old proverb of the sheep and the
wolf ... the indigenous people have it also ... we have
both inside of us and we must keep a fine balance ...
the one you feed grows ... so we must learn to feed both
and keep both strong ... the sheep to have compassion
and the wolf for self-preservation ... we cannot discard
either of them and must keep both intact ... that's the
gist of it ... all the rest is hogwash and him wanting
to meet the "masters of the universe" ... which is the
holy spirit that resides within us if we fear and love
the LORD God Almighty


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[10011] [10015]


10011


Date: December 24, 2023 at 11:37:40
From: shadow, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


Oh dear, georg. You're mixing up your stories.

The sheep-and-wolves metaphor has to do with people whose
hearts are war-intended/oriented *masquerading* as
peacefully-intended/oriented...as in, a wolf in sheep's
clothing, which is the actual saying.

There being "two of something inside us," sometimes
wolves, sometimes other animals, one being "dark" and one
being "light," or whatever other polarized qualities have
been utilized in this story, points out beautifully that
our character depends upon "which one we feed"...whether
we "feed" our darker/denser (fear-based) feelings,
thoughts and views of reality, or whether we feed our
lighter/more-elevated (love-based) feelings, thoughts and
views of reality...

And FWIW, I don't see *compassion* and "self-
preservation" as being two qualities in a polarized
relationship at all...


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[10015]


10015


Date: December 24, 2023 at 21:57:47
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


gOnly he will deserve the name of gmanh and can count
upon anything prepared for them from above, who has
already acquired corresponding data for being able to
preserve intact both the wolf and the sheep entrusted to
his care.h
— G.I. Gurdjieff


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10001


Date: December 23, 2023 at 13:20:26
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


and yet, it's on your reading list...lol...


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10010


Date: December 24, 2023 at 11:06:57
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


Gurdjieff has one sentence in his book (Meetings With
Remarkable Men) that resonates with me ... it's the old
proverb of the sheep and the wolf

the indigenous people have it also ... we have
both inside of us and we must keep a fine balance ...
the one you feed grows ... so we must learn to feed
both and keep both strong

the sheep to have compassion and the wolf for self-
preservation ... we cannot discard either of them and
must keep both intact ... that's the gist of it ...

all the rest is hogwash and him wanting to meet the
"masters of the universe"

which is the holy spirit that resides within us if we
fear and love the LORD God Almighty

so, Selah

Selah

Selah



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None


10008


Date: December 24, 2023 at 10:59:46
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


his name is there ... not this book ... this book is
excrement


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10012


Date: December 24, 2023 at 12:12:04
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


the book is there too...


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10013


Date: December 24, 2023 at 12:16:12
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


Gibson, William -- Neuromancer
Golding, William -- Lord of the Flies
Grass, Gunter -- The Tin Drum
Gurdjieff, George -- Meetings With Remarkable Men

Hammett, Dashiell -- The Maltese Falcon
Heinlein, Robert -- Stranger in a Strange Land


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10014


Date: December 24, 2023 at 21:55:09
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


did I dispute that? no, not, never ... you make stuff up
to suit yourself ... it is the lord of the flies book
that is crap and worthless ... I own a copy thinking it
would be something like the one I read and it was
nothing like it ... just crap ... so there, that's my
opinion ... take it or leave it but don't misrepresent
it


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10016


Date: December 25, 2023 at 00:40:18
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


ah, yeah...

your words...

"his name is there ... not this book ... this book is
excrement "

whatever dude...i pass...


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10017


Date: December 25, 2023 at 16:50:41
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


tried hard several times to read it and never got past
the first few pages ... impenetrable to my mind and
antithetical also ... it is somewhat like my not liking
one song of Robert Hunter ... who claimed that "Friend
of the Devil" was his masterpiece ... my choice would
be "Ripple" by far and away the most cosmic of them all
... or "The Wheel" that he wrote for the Garcia solo
album ... he's got two wives ... the sheriff is after
him ... he runs into the devil and gets twenty bills
... spends the night in Reno in a cave up in the hills
... who is this guy ... the first one says she's got
his child but "it don't look like me" ... this guy is a
hooligan ... masterpiece ... no thank you


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10025


Date: December 26, 2023 at 10:31:51
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


I think you miss the point.. not that it ain't there.. but it's outside your view.

It's sorta like that reading list of your's. Where you have Kesey's One Flew Over.. which is a good read, and got Ken the limelight for sure, but his Sometimes a Great Notion is on another level entirely. Man, that guy captured a slice of the American pie. Theres some real depth there. And then, you list Heinleins Stranger.. which touches on his central theme for sure, but his Time Enough for Love is an epic treatment of the same. Really, georg, ask yourself, do we really have enough time to learn, to know how to love? Or, you list Gurdjieff's second book, when in fact the third, Life is Real Only Then When I Am, is much more to the point. And one I am sure you would agree with if/when you get that far..

But hey, we all only see what we choose to see. Or more specifically, we can only see what lies in our field of view.

I find that little ditty of Robert's, Friend of the Devil, to be a cute song.. it paints a picture, sort of the way Mark Knopfler or Neil, or Bobby D often will.. more than the words themselves define a particular.. and I like the feeling I get when its called to mind. Though to judge anything on it would be missing the incredible body of Hunters work. Whereas Terrapin Station, now thats something you can dig your teeth into, might be more to your liking.. I love the lines..

Since the end is never told
We pay the teller off in gold
In hopes he will come back
But he cannot be bought or sold..

Theres just something about the picture that forms in my mind.. like the way Neil weaves in and out of the present, and the past, in Going Home..


Responses:
[10028]


10028


Date: December 28, 2023 at 11:59:00
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


Hey, georg, just to add..

If you do dive into Kesey's Sometimes a Great Notion, which I highly
recommend as one of the least appreciated great American novels, think
Steinbeck man, consider following that up with Tom Wolfes Electric
Kool-Aid Acid Test, which is a documentary of what Ken was doing when
he wrote Sometimes a Great Notion.. what he went through to actually
grok that slice of the American pie..


Responses:
None


10020


Date: December 25, 2023 at 20:12:51
From: old timer, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?

URL: https://www.survivorshandbook.com/feet-of-clay-gurdjieff/


a good write on this gurdjeiff dude. explains a lot about these 2



GEORGEI IVANOVITCH GURDJIEFF


GURDJIEFF CLAIMS OUR INTEREST because he, or his doctrines as
propounded by his disciple Ouspensky, bewitched so many interesting
and intelligent people, including the writer Katherine Mansfield, A. R.
Orage, the distinguished socialist editor of The New Age, Margaret
Anderson, the editor of the Little Review, and her friend and co-editor
Jane Heap; the surgeon and sexologist Kenneth Walker; Olgivanna, the
third wife of Frank Lloyd Wright; John Godolphin Bennett, later to become
something of a guru himself. The psychiatrists James Young and Maurice
Nicoll, and the psychoanalyst David Eder were also followers. T. S. Eliot,
David Garnett and Herbert Read intermittently attended Ouspenskys
meetings. Ouspensky, who first encountered Gurdjieff in 1915, became
chiefly based in London and was therefore more accessible to interested
English people than the guru himself.

The date of Gurdjieffs birth is uncertain. Some say 1866; others quote
one of his several passports, which showed December 28, 1877. James
Moore,1 Gurdjieffs latest biographer and the author of Gurdjieff and
Katherine Mansfield, argues that the earlier date is the more probable.
Gurdjieff was secretive about this as he was about so many features of his
background. He died on October 29, 1949. His birthplace was
Alexandropol (formerly Gumru) in Russian Armenia, in the land lying
between the Black Sea on the West and the Caspian Sea on the East,
south of the Caucasus mountains. His father was Greek, his mother
Armenian. Armenian was spoken at home, but he also learned some
Greek, some Turkish, and the local dialects. In his autobiographical
memoir, Meetings with Remarkable Men, he claimed to know eighteen
languages, but there is no evidence to support this. Throughout his life,
he continued to speak both Russian and English incorrectly.

Gurdjieff was the eldest of six children; he had a brother and four
sisters. One of the sisters died young. In Gurdjieffs early childhood, the
family moved to the near-by city of Kars, shortly after the defeat of the
Turkish forces there in 1878 by the Grand Duke Michael Niklayevich,
brother of the Russian Tsar. The boy Gurdjieff was accepted as a
chorister at Kars military cathedral, and being obviously intelligent,
attracted the notice of Father Dean Borsh, who helped to educate him. He
developed a passion for learning, read widely in Greek, Armenian, and
Russian, and began to harbour a wish to find some answer to the problem
of the meaning of life. He resembles other gurus in going through a
period of doubt which was succeeded by the revelation which manifested
itself in his new cosmogony and his teaching. Why his perplexity was so
extreme as to propel him into a search for truth which lasted twenty years
is not apparent.

Gurdjieffs esoteric knowledge and status as a guru were attributed to
his discoveries during his travels in Central Asia, but we are entirely
dependent upon his own inaccurate account. The period 18871911
remains unsubstantiated and mysterious. Gurdjieff claimed to have
learned much from a three months stay in the chief Sarmoung
monastery, belonging to a brotherhood which he said taught him secret
wisdom derived from traditions dating back to 3500 B.C., including
physical techniques for self-transformation, and sacred dances. Gurdjieff
was careful never to be specific about the exact location of these teachers
of secret knowledge, although he later stated that he had a teacher from
whom he was never separated, and with whom he constantly
communicated, presumably telepathically. The Sarmoung monastery
cannot be identified, and even disciples of Gurdjieff regard his account of
it as an allegory rather than literal truth. His own autobiographical
account, in Meetings with Remarkable Men, is contradictory and
chronologically unreliable. What does emerge from that book is his
resourcefulness and his capacity to survive, both physically and
financially. He sold carpets and antiques; repaired sewing machines;
bought quantities of old-fashioned corsets and remodeled them to suit
current taste; traded in oil and fish, and claimed that he cured drug
addicts by hypnosis. His prowess as a healer was, he wrote,
unprecedented (Gurdjieff never exhibited false modesty). When asked by
Ouspensky about his studies and discoveries, he said that he travelled
with a group of specialists in various subjects who eventually pooled their
knowledge; but he did not vouchsafe their names or say where they were,
nor did he answer direct questions about where he had been. About
schools and where he had found the knowledge he undoubtedly
possessed he spoke very little and always superficially.2 It is hardly
surprising that there were rumours that he was a secret agent employed
by the Russians.

Gurdjieff established himself as a guru in Moscow in 1912. His principal
contention was that man does not know himself, and is therefore not what
he should be. He considered that modern civilization had made it difficult
to co-ordinate the physical, emotional, and intellectual aspects of
personality, which he believed were controlled by three separate centres.
He thought that the majority of people were asleep, and behaved like
machines reacting blindly to external forces. His training was designed to
awaken selected followers to a higher level of consciousness and a new
perception of reality.

A modern man lives in sleep, in sleep he is born and in sleep he dies.
About sleep, its significance and its role in life, we will speak later. But at
present just think of one thing, what knowledge can a sleeping man have?
And if you think about it and at the same time remember that sleep is the
chief feature of our being, it will at once become clear to you that if a man
really wants knowledge, he must first of all think about how to wake, that
is, about how to change his being.3

By participating in what became known as The Work, the fortunate few
might become more able to co-ordinate the three centres through self-
observation. Instead of living in a dream in which a series of fleeting Is
succeeded one another, the awakened individual would cease living in
quotation marks, achieve a new unity, and, by means of this, direct his
own destiny, or become able to do, as Gurdjieff phrased it. To do means
to act consciously and according to ones will.4 This change in
consciousness, like everything else, has a material basis, which in this
case manifests itself as a trace chemical compound in the brain.

The keystone of his teaching, of course, was that no progress no human
progress, that is can be accomplished except on an individual basis.
Group work is valuable only in the sense that it helps the individual to
achieve individual self-perfection.5

J. G. Bennett, who died in 1974, first met Gurdjieff in 1920. In his book
Gurdjieff: Making a New World, Bennett devoted three chapters to
Gurdjieffs travels and search for esoteric wisdom. Both J. G. Bennett and
James Moore have to admit that it is impossible to trace Gurdjieffs travels
with any degree of accuracy. Although careful never to commit himself
whole-heartedly, Bennett clearly believed in the literal truth of the
tradition that, somewhere in Central Asia, there is a group of wise men or
Masters of Wisdom who watch over the destiny of mankind and
intervene from time to time to alter the course of events by introducing
new ideas and new modes of thinking. Bennett suggests that Gurdjieff
made contact with such a group; an Inner Circle of Humanity, perhaps
the Sarmoung brotherhood, whose members were highly developed
spiritually and able to generate higher energies. Bennett wrote:

The true significance of such a group must lie in its mission. The more
that one becomes aware of the spiritual realities, the more convinced
does one become that a very great action is now proceeding in the world.
The task before us is to help mankind to make the difficult and dangerous
transition to a new epoch. If we find evidence that Gurdjieff was
concerned in this task and more-over that he opened the way for us to
participate in it, we shall have gone a long way to connecting him with the
Inner Circle.6

We shall again encounter the idea that mankind is on the threshold of a
new epoch when discussing the ideas of Jung.
Bennett was a long-term disciple of Ouspensky, and was therefore at
one removed from the master himself. But he remained intermittently in
touch with Gurdjieff, and saw him frequently during the last two years of
his life. Bennett believed that Gurdjieffs ideas and teachings had
transformed his own life, and himself ran groups along Gurdjieffian lines in
London, sometimes with dire effects upon participants, as I remember
from seeing one or two of them as psychiatric patients. Nevertheless,
Bennett followed a path characteristic of those who constantly search for
esoteric wisdom without ever quite finding what they want.

Bennett . . . broke from the Gurdjieffian mainstream in 1955 to pursue
eclectic affiliations (being inter alia opened into Subud by Hosein Rofe,
initiated by the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, received into the Roman Catholic
Church, and introduced to the Invisible Hierarchy by Idries Shah).7

The Russian revolution of 1917 caused Gurdjieff to move to Tiflis in
Georgia and then to Constantinople and on to Berlin. His exhausting and
sometimes dangerous journeys are chronicled by his biographer, James
Moore. His close associates Thomas and Olga de Hartmann joined him in
one of his stopping places: Essentuki in the Caucasus. This was in August
1917, not long after Kerensky had been announced as Prime Minister of
the coalition government which followed the abdication of the Tsar.
Gurjdieff then suddenly announced that he was going to Tuapse, on the
Black Sea. The dutiful de Hartmanns followed. Their account of an
exhausting nocturnal walk forced on them by Gurdjieff in spite of the fact
that they were unsuitably clad and also dead tired is a striking example of
the autocratic and unreasonable demands which Gurdjieff made on his
followers which they nevertheless slavishly obeyed. Olga de Hartmanns
feet were so swollen and bleeding that she could not put on her shoes and
had to walk barefoot. Thomas de Hartmann had missed a nights sleep
because he had been ordered to stay on guard. Their limbs ached and
they were both exhausted; but they went on nevertheless.

Mr. Gurdjieff demanded from us a very great effort, especially difficult
because we did not know when it would end. We suffered and would have
been only too happy to rest; but there was no protest in us, because the
one thing we really wished to do was to follow Mr. Gurdjieff. Beside that,
everything else seemed unimportant.8

It was a recurrent pattern of behaviour. The de Hartmanns claim that
these demands were made upon them as a way of teaching them to
overcome emotional and physical difficulties. Gurdjieff certainly pushed
people to the limit of their physical capacities; and some discovered that
they had more powers of endurance than they had ever suspected.

When short of money, he survived by dealing in caviar and carpets. He
had hoped to settle in England, but the Home Office were suspicious of
him and would not permit him to stay unless he did so as a private
individual, which would have meant abandoning his nucleus of followers.
Eventually, the generosity of Lady Rothermere, the estranged wife of the
newspaper magnate, together with funds from other wealthy supporters,
made it possible for him to set up his Institute for the Harmonious
Development of Man at the Chateau de Prieur, a large estate near
Fontainebleau, in France.

The Work was carried out in groups and included special exercises and
dances, exhausting physical work, training in memory and self-
observation, together with lectures given by Gurdjieff at irregular
intervals. Some of those who participated in the so-called Sacred
Dances found them more valuable than Yoga or any other training
affecting physical awareness. Complete concentration on whatever was
being carried out at the time was an essential part of Gurdjieffs message
and of his own behaviour. Insistence on living intensely in the present
moment and discarding the concern with past or future which interferes
with fully experiencing the here-and-now, is not confined to Gurdjieffs
teaching. Zen also treats the past and future as fleeting illusions. It is
only the present which is eternally real.9

Gurdjieff was a dictator. He had the capacity so completely to humiliate
his disciples that grown men would burst into tears. He might then show
the victim special favour. He demanded unquestioning obedience to his
arbitrary commands. For example, he once suddenly announced that
none of his followers might speak to each other within the Institute. All
communication must be by means of the special physical movements he
had taught them. Gurdjieff sometimes imposed fasting for periods up to a
week without any lessening of the work load. His authority was such that
his followers convinced themselves that these orders were for their own
good. Those less infatuated are likely to think that, like other gurus,
Gurdjieff enjoyed the exercise of power for its own sake. There were also
dinners at which large quantities of alcohol were drunk, and large sums of
money extracted from the diners.

Gurdjieff also developed an elaborate cosmology. His picture of the
universe and mans place in it is complex, and unsupported by any
objective evidence. It is deliberately obscure and often incoherent. Yet,
because Gurdjieff was a powerful guru whose followers included some
sophisticated, intelligent people, attempts have been made by his
followers to make sense out of what appears to the sceptical reader to be
a psychotic delusional system. The task is rendered more difficult by the
numerous ludicrous neologisms which Gurdjieff introduced. It is
appropriate to remind the reader that chronic schizophrenics often invent
words which carry a special meaning for them but which others find hard
to understand. Eugen Bleuler, the famous director of the Burgholzli
mental hospital in Zurich and the originator of the term schizophrenia,
quotes a patient who wrote:

At Apell plain church-state, the people have customs and habits partly
taken from glos-faith because the father wanted to enter new f. situation,
since they believed the father had a Babeli comediation only with music.
Therefore they went to the high Osetion and on the cabbage earth and all
sorts of malice, and against everything good. On their inverted Osetion
valley will come and within thus is the father righteousness.10

Another patient referred to being tormented by elbow-people. As Bleuler
notes, wording is preferably bombastic. The patients utter trivialities
using highly affected expressions as if they were of the greatest interest
to humanity.11 I am not suggesting that Gurdjieff was schizophrenic, but
his use of language resembled that employed by some psychotics.
For example, Gurdjieff is said to have believed in God, to whom he
referred as Our Almighty Omni-Loving Common Father Uni-Being Creator
Endlessness.12 This description may fairly be described as bombastic.
In the beginning was the Most Most Holy Sun Absolute in space which
was also endless, but which was charged with a primordial cosmic
substance Etherokilno. Because this nebulous Etherokilno was in static
equilibrium, the super-sun existed and was maintained by our Common
Father, quite independently of outside stimulus, through the internal
action of his laws and under the dispensation termed Autoegocrat (I keep
everything under my control).13

However, Time, that villain who attacks us all, appeared in the shape of
the merciless Heropass, which so threatened to diminish the volume of
Sun Absolute that steps had to be taken to forestall this action.
Thereupon Common Father issued from himself a creative World-God
named Theomertmalogos which interacted with Etherokilno to produce
our universe Megalocosmos. This creation is maintained by a principle or
law named Trogoautoegocrat by eating myself, I am maintained: In the
cosmic sense, God feeds on the Creation and the creation feeds on
God.14 So God and his creation become separate entities, which are
only distantly related to each other, and creation is maintained by new
laws; Triamazikamno, the law of Three, and Heptaparparashinokh or
Eftalogodiksis, the law of Seven.

The law of Three is relatively straightforward. The higher blends with the
lower in order to actualise the middle. For example, sperm and ovum
merge to create the embryo. This formula can be applied to many
situations in which opposites require a third Moore gives as an example
a judge resolving a case between plaintiff and defendant.
The law of Seven is more complex, and, in my view, incoherent.
Gurdjieff tried to relate cosmology with the musical scale, believing that
every completing process has seven discrete phases corresponding to an
ascending or descending series of notes, including the two semitonal
intervals, which constitute necessary irregularities. Gurdjieff represented
the universe in a diagram called the Ray of Creation which begins with the
Absolute and ends with the moon.

Gurdjieff taught that a collision between a comet named Kondoor and
the earth gave rise to two orbiting bodies, Loondeiperzo (later known as
the moon) and Anulios. After the shock a whole commission consisting
of Angels and Archangels, specialists in the work of World-creation and
World-maintenance, under the direction of the Most Great Archangel
Sakaki, was immediately sent from the Most Holy Sun Absolute to that
solar system Ors.15 Gurdjieffs beliefs about the moon were even more
eccentric. He claimed that the moon was still an unborn planet which was
gradually becoming warmer and more like earth, just as the earth was
becoming warmer and more like the sun. Anulios became forgotten but
the moon required energy to assist its evolution. Sakaki therefore
arranged that the planet earth should send to the moon the sacred
vibration askokin. Askokin was liberated when organic life on earth dies.
According to Ouspenskys report in In Search of the Miraculous, Gurdjieff
said:

The process of the growth and the warming of the moon is connected with
life and death on the earth. Everything living sets free at its death a
certain amount of the energy that has animated it; this energy, or the
souls of everything living plants, animals, people is attracted to the
moon as though by a huge electro-magnet, and brings to it the warmth
and the life upon which its growth depends, that is, the growth of the ray
of creation. In the economy of the universe nothing is lost, and a certain
energy having finished its work on one plane goes to another.16

He then went on to say that the moon influences everything that happens
on earth.

Man, like every other living being, cannot, in the ordinary conditions of
life, tear himself free from the moon. All his movements and consequently
all his actions are controlled by the moon. If he kills another man, the
moon does it; if he sacrifices himself for others, the moon does that also.
All evil deeds, all crimes, all self-sacrificing actions, all heroic exploits, as
well as all the actions of ordinary life, are controlled by the moon.17

And J. G. Bennett wrote:

At a certain point in the history of the earth it was perceived by the Higher
Powers that a very undesirable and dangerous situation was developing
on the planet earth which could endanger the equilibrium of the entire
solar system and, in particular, the evolution of the Moon.18

If men realized that, because they were controlled by the moon, their
personal efforts were unavailing, might they not be tempted to mass
suicide, and so deprive the moon of the askokin needed for its
development? To guard against this possibility, the Higher Powers
implanted an organ at the base of mans spine delightfully named by
Gurdjieff the organ Kundabuffer.* This had the effect of ensuring that
man would base his values solely on satisfying his own desires and the
pursuit of happiness by making him perceive reality as topsy-turvy. So
man would serve the moon blindly, unaware that, by embarking on the
path of self-development, he could free himself from the moon altogether.
Once the moon crisis had passed, the organ Kundabuffer was removed;
but the majority of mankind still behave blindly, selfishly, and without
insight as if the organ was still there. This is actually necessary if the
purposes of nature are to be fulfilled. According to Ouspensky, Gurdjieff
said that the evolution of humanity as a whole might be injurious.

For instance, the evolution of humanity beyond a certain point, or, to
speak more correctly, above a certain percentage, would be fatal for the
moon. The moon at present feeds on organic life, on humanity.
Humanity is part of organic life; this means that humanity is food for the
moon. If all men were to become too intelligent they would not want to be
eaten by the moon.19

The majority of human beings provide askokin for the moon after death,
and are then condemned to obliteration. However, some few who follow
the path of self-development and self-realization prescribed by Gurdjieff
create askokin during life. Such people may finally develop a soul which
can survive and may even reach Objective Reason and attain a form of
immortality by being reunited with the Most Most Holy Sun Absolute.

* Many of Gurdjieffs neologisms have fairly obvious derivations. Since the
organ Kundabuffer is supposed to have been inserted at the base of the
spine, it appears probable that the name is derived from Kundalini yoga, in
which a serpent is pictured as coiled in a similar position.

How can anyone ever have taken this kind of thing seriously? Some
have referred to Gurdjieffs teachings as myths, and Bhagwan Shree
Rajneesh claimed that Gurdjieff was joking about the moon, but J. G.
Bennett wrote that Gurdjieff certainly intended his account of the
historical appearance and disappearance of the organ Kundabuffer to be
taken literally.20 He also quotes the author Denis Saurat, then Director of
the French Institute in London, as believing that Gurdjieffs teaching
could not be of terrestrial origin. Either Gurdjieff had revelations
vouchsafed only to prophets or he had access to a school on a
supernatural level.21 Although writers about Gurdjieff tend to distance
themselves from his most extravagant propositions, Philip Mairet, an
intelligent literary figure who was editor of the New English Weekly, and
who was also well acquainted with the works of Freud, Jung, and Adler, is
reported as saying: No system of gnostic soteriological philosophy that
has been published to the modern world is comparable to it in power and
intellectual articulation.22 Having read Ouspenskys exposition of
Gurdjieffs teaching in his book In Search of the Miraculous, and having
attempted to read Gurdjieffs own book All and Everything, I can only
wonder at Mairets opinion. Perhaps I have extracted enough to give the
reader some idea of Gurdjieffs picture of the cosmos, and to demonstrate
that Gurdjieffs own writings are both voluminous and obscure. Even his
devotees say that All and Everything has to be read several times if its
meaning is to be grasped; and some claim that Gurdjieffs obscurity was
deliberate; a device adopted to ensure that the disciple would have to
make a considerable effort at understanding on his own account rather
than be spoon-fed with clear statements and doctrines.

At first sight, it is difficult to believe that Gurdjieffs elaborate cosmology
was anything other than a planned, comical confidence trick designed to
demonstrate how far the gullibility of his followers could be tested. His
own account of how he survived his early wanderings reveals how expert
he was at deception. Gurdjieff wrote that he coloured sparrows with
aniline dyes and sold them as American canaries in Samarkand. He tells
us that he had to leave quickly in case rain washed the sparrows clean.
When people brought him sewing machines and other mechanical objects
for repair, he was often able to see that the mere shift of a lever would
cure the problem. However, he was careful to pretend that such repairs
were time-consuming and difficult, and charged accordingly. He also
wrote that he found out in advance which villages and towns the new
railway would pass through, and then informed the local authorities that
he had the power to arrange the course of the railway. He boasted that he
obtained large sums for his pretended services, and said that he had no
pangs of conscience about doing so.23

We know from J. G. Bennett that, when he and his followers were in
danger from the conflict between the Cossacks and the Bolsheviks,
Gurdjieff managed to get transport from the Provincial Government by
spreading a rumour that he knew of enormously rich deposits of gold and
platinum in the Caucasus mountains which would fill the Governments
coffers. Bennett wrote:

In all this, he was also demonstrating to his pupils the power of
suggestion and the ease with which people could be made to believe any
old tale.24

Fritz Peters recounts an elaborate hoax in which Gurdjieff diluted a bottle
of vin ordinaire with water, and then covered it with sand and cobwebs.
Two distinguished women visitors were tricked into believing that
Gurdjieff was serving them with wine of a rare vintage, and dutifully
pronounced it the most delicious which they had ever tasted.25

Fritz Peters recalled an occasion on which a rich English lady
approached Gurdjieff as he was sitting at a cafe table and offered him a
cheque for 1,000 if he would tell her the secret of life. Gurdjieff
promptly summoned a well-known prostitute from her beat in front of the
cafe, gave her a drink, and proceeded to tell her that he was a being from
another planet called Karatas. He complained that it was very expensive
to have the food he needed flown in from this planet, but urged the
prostitute to taste some which he gave her. When asked what she made
of it, she replied that he had given her cherries, and went on her way with
the money Gurdjieff pressed upon her, obviously believing that he was
mad. Gurdjieff turned to the English lady and said: That is the secret of
life. She appeared to be disgusted, called him a charlatan, and went off.
However, she reappeared later on the same day, gave Gurdjieff the cheque
for 1,000, and became a devoted follower.26

He became skilled at extracting money from Americans to support his
enterprises at the Chateau du Prieur, and referred to this activity as
shearing sheep. For example, an American woman travelled from the
United States to the Prieur to seek Gurdjieffs advice about her chain
smoking, which she said was a phallic activity connected with her marital
sexual difficulties. After a pause for thought Gurdjieff suggested that she
should change her brand of cigarette to Gauloises Bleus, and charged her
a large fee for this advice, which she gladly and gratefully paid. There is
no doubt that Gurdjieff could be a convincing confidence trickster when
he so wished and that he did not hesitate to mislead the gullible when it
suited him. He was always a wonderful storyteller who held his audiences
entranced.

He told Peters, I not make money like others make money, and when I
have too much money I spend. But I never need money for self, and I not
make or earn money, I ask for money and people always give and for this I
give opportunity study my teaching.27 However, he contradicted himself
a moment later by saying that he owned a business making false
eyelashes and another business selling rugs. When he went to New York
in 1933, he demanded coaching in the use of four-letter words in English
from Fritz Peters before giving a dinner for some fifteen New Yorkers.
When the diners had drunk a certain amount, Gurdjieff began to tell them
that it was a pity that most people especially Americans were
motivated only by genital urges. He picked out a particularly elegant
woman and told her in crude terms that she took so much trouble with her
appearance because she wanted to fuck. The guests were soon behaving
in an uninhibited fashion and become physically entangled with each
other. Gurdjieff then announced that he had proved his point that
Americans were decadent and demanded that he be paid for his lesson.
According to Peters, he collected several thousand dollars.

Yet confidence trickery cannot be the whole explanation of Gurdjieffs
teaching. If Gurdjieff could support himself so easily by deception, why
should he bother to invent a cosmogony? Gurdjieff found writing a
burden. He was much more impressive as a lecturer than he was as a
writer. All and Everything is enormously long, and, although it was
dictated to Olga de Hartmann rather than written, it must have demanded
considerable dedication to complete. Gurdjieff began his dictation on 16
December 1924. He completed the dictation of Beelzebubs Tales to his
Grandson (the first part of All and Everything) in November 1927. Could
anyone devote so much time and energy to creating something in which
he did not believe himself, with the deliberate intention to deceive? We
hover on the borderline between confidence trickery and psychosis.
Gurdjieffs propositions about the universe were totally at variance with
the discoveries of astronomers and other scientists, and can only be
compared with science fiction, but I think he believed in them, just as
paranoid psychotics believe in their delusional systems.

Gurdjieffs arrogance and disregard of established experts were
extraordinary. When he visited the caves of Lascaux, he told J. G. Bennett
that he did not agree with the Abb Breuils dating of the rock paintings at
thirty thousand years ago because he had concluded that the paintings
were the work of a brotherhood that existed after the loss of Atlantis
some seven or eight thousand years ago. He also told Bennett that he
intended that his Institute would become a centre of training and
research not only into the powers of man himself, but into the secrets of
the solar system. He said he had invented a special means for increasing
the visibility of the planets and the sun and also for releasing energies
that would influence the whole world situation.28

Gurdjieffs complete disregard for science and for the views of
generally accepted experts is narcissistic in the extreme. But he did, at
times, show considerable interest in other people, and compassion for
those who were suffering. He sometimes exhibited a capacity for intense
concentration upon individuals, which was certainly one component of his
undoubted charisma. Fritz Peters, whose parents were divorced, was
legally adopted by his mothers sister, Margaret Anderson and her friend
Jane Heap, who were mentioned earlier as adherents of Gurdjieff. Peters,
who was brought to Le Prieur when he was a boy of eleven and stayed
there until he was fifteen, described Gurdjieffs behaviour to himself.

Whenever I saw him, whenever he gave me an order, he was fully aware of
me, completely concentrated on whatever words he said to me; his
attention never wandered when I spoke to him. He always knew exactly
what I was doing, what I had done. I think we must all have felt, certainly I
did, when he was with any one of us, that we received his total attention. I
can think of nothing more complimentary in human relations.29

This intense concentration, as we have seen, was an important part of
Gurdjieffs teaching. It entered into everything he did. His ability to
mobilize and direct attention may have accounted for his extraordinary
effect on other people.

When you do a thing, do it with the whole self. One thing at a time. Now I
sit here and eat. For me nothing exists in the world except this food, this
table. I eat with the whole attention. So you must do in everything . . . To
be able to do one thing at a time . . . this is the property of Man, not man
in quotation marks.30

In movement, he gave the impression of complete co-ordination and
integrated power. His gait and his gestures were never hurried, but
flowed in unison with the rhythm of his breathing like those of a peasant
or a mountaineer.31 Peters writes that Gurdjieffs presence and physical
magnetism were undeniable and generally overwhelming. When, in the
late summer of 1945, long after he had left the Prieur, Peters suffered
from severe depression with insomnia, anorexia, and loss of weight, he
sought Gurdjieff in Paris. Gurdjieff realized that he was ill, forbade him to
talk and at once offered him a bedroom for as long as he needed it. He
made Peters drink strong, hot coffee, and concentrated upon him
intensely. It seemed to Peters that a violent electric blue light emanated
from Gurdjieff and entered himself. Whatever the reason, Peters promptly
recovered from his depression.

However, not everything about Gurdjieff was so impressive. His
personal habits could be disgusting. One of the jobs that Peters was
given when he was still resident at the Prieur, was to clean Gurdjieffs
rooms.

What he could do to his dressing room and bathroom is something that
cannot be described without invading his privacy; I will only say that
physically, Mr. Gurdjieff, at least so I gathered, lived like an animal . . .
There were times when I would have to use a ladder to clean the walls.32

Gurdjieff generalized from his own experience in that he set himself up as
a teacher who could train others to attain the wisdom and autonomy
which he believed himself to possess. But such teachings could only be
assimilated by the chosen few. As we saw earlier, Gurdjieff did not believe
that mankind as a whole was capable of development, or that it was
desirable that any attempt should be made in this direction, lest the
development of the moon might suffer. Gurdjieff, like many other gurus,
was unashamedly elitist and authoritarian.

Gurdjieffs sexual behaviour was unscrupulous, in that he coupled with
any female disciple whom he found attractive, and not infrequently made
her pregnant. When Fritz Peters went to the Chateau du Prieur at the age
of eleven, there were about ten other children there, some of whom were
undoubtedly fathered by Gurdjieff.
Like other gurus whom we have encountered, Gurdjieff enjoyed the
exercise of power. We saw earlier what physical demands he made on the
de Hartmanns. He was not directly cruel, but the regime he imposed upon
his disciples was rigorous to the point of physical exhaustion.

The daily routine was exacting in the extreme. We woke up at five or six in
the morning and worked for two hours before breakfast. Afterwards there
was more work: building, felling trees, sawing timber, caring for the
animals of almost every domestic species, cooking, cleaning, and every
kind of domestic duty. After a quick light lunch and a period of rest, one or
two hours were devoted to exercises and rhythms accompanied by
music usually played by Thomas de Hartmann on the piano. Sometimes
there would be fasts lasting one, two, three or even up to seven days
during which all the work continued as usual. In the evening, there would
be classes in rhythms and ritual dances which might go on for three, four
or five hours until everyone was totally exhausted.33

It is not surprising that one disciple who was fixing trusses twenty-five
feet above the ground fell asleep whilst precariously balanced on a narrow
beam and had to be rescued by Gurdjieff.

Bennett does not point out that, whether or not this regime assisted
spiritual development, it was certainly a convenient way of obtaining free
labour to run the Prieur. Moreover, Gurdjieff, as an experienced
hypnotist, would have realized that physical exhaustion makes people
more suggestible, although one of his avowed aims was to discover some
means of destroying in people the predilection for suggestibility.34 He
once ordered Orage to dig a ditch to drain water from the kitchen garden.
Orage worked extremely hard for several days. He was then told to make
the edges of the ditch quite equal, and did so after more labour.
Immediately after he had finished, Gurdjieff ordered him to fill in the ditch
because it was no longer needed.

One of Gurdjieffs disciples was Olgivanna Ivanovna Lazovich, who
became the third wife of the American architect, Frank Lloyd Wright. She
first encountered Gurdjieff in Russia in 1917 at a time of crisis in her life.
She was nineteen years old and was just about to have a child. Her first
marriage was failing, her father was ill, her mother far distant. When
Gurdjieff moved to the Prieur, she joined him, became one of his best
dancers, and an assistant instructor in The Work. In 1924, Gurdjieff
suggested that she join her brother in America for no obvious reason.
Shortly after her arrival, she encountered Frank Lloyd Wright at a ballet
performance in Chicago and fell in love with him. Gurdjieff visited the
Wrights on more than one occasion. Finding that Wright was seriously
worried about his digestion, Gurdjieff invited them both out to dinner and
served a series of extremely hot and indigestible dishes followed by the
inevitable draughts of Armagnac. Wright felt terrible, but woke up the
next morning to find that his fears about his digestion had disappeared.35
On another occasion,

Wright grandly remarked that perhaps he should send some of his pupils
to Gurdjieff in Paris. Then they can come back to me and Ill finish them
off.
You finish! You are idiot, said Gurdjieff angrily. You finish! No. You
begin. I finish. It was clear that Wright had met his match.36

Wright had many guru-like characteristics himself, so that it is not
surprising to learn that these two autocrats found themselves in
competition. Even so, Gurdjieff won Wright over. Shortly after Gurdjieffs
death, when Wright was receiving a medal in New York, he interrupted
proceedings to announce: The greatest man in the world has recently
died. His name was Gurdjieff.37

Olgivanna appears to have acquired or developed a number of
Gurdjieffs less engaging traits. Draftsmen, apprentices and their wives
were supposed to sit at Olgivannas feet whilst she gave them instructions
and mercilessly criticized their failings. They even had to undergo the
ordeal of listening to Wright reading from Gurdjieffs writings.38 As she
became older, she became more and more dictatorial, and, after Wrights
death, became a despotic and jealous widow with whom scholars and
instructors preferred not to negotiate.39

Adherents of Gurdjieffs teaching recount with satisfaction that he did
not bring pressure upon followers to stay with him, and in fact often
dismissed them. This is interpreted as indicating his desire that they
should become independent of him. In some cases, it may rather have
been his perception of impending apostasy: gurus generally prefer to rid
themselves of potential dissidents rather than be deserted. Ouspensky,
Gurdjieffs more devoted disciple and interpreter, began to lose
confidence in him as a person as early as 1917. This seems to have been
precipitated by Gurdjieffs arbitrary dispersal of the group he had
assembled around him in Essentuki. Ouspensky continued to believe in
the authenticity of Gurdjieffs vision and teaching which he accepted as
having been handed down from some ancient, esoteric source, but found
the man himself more and more intolerable. Ouspensky formally broke off
relations in January 1924, and forbade his own pupils to communicate
with Gurdjieff or refer to him.40

A. R. Orage, the talented editor of the New Age, had abandoned literary
life in London for life at the Prieur, and later moved to New York, where
he set up his own Gurdjieffian groups, and whence he sent large sums of
money to Gurdjieff. During the seven years of his close involvement with
Gurdjieff, he produced practically no work of his own. As John Carswell
puts it: The most notable English editor of his time had become a
mysterious exile owing obedience to an Armenian magus. 41 Orages
devotion was tested to the limit by Gurdjieffs incessant demands for
money, and by the abuse heaped upon him when he did not instantly obey.
His allegiance was further undermined by his wife, Jessie Dwight, whom
he married in 1927, and who had hated her visit to the Prieur. Eventually,
Gurdjieff, realizing Orages disillusion, turned up in New York when Orage
was temporarily absent, assembled Orages group, denounced Orage and
required each member to sign a written declaration that they would have
nothing further to do with their instructor. Some did so; others refused.
Orage, summoned back from England, demanded to see Gurdjieff, and,
after remarking that he too repudiated the Orage created by Gurdjieff,
signed the document denouncing his own teaching.

J. G. Bennett gives a list of close adherents whom Gurdjieff deliberately
dismissed. Bennett himself left the Prieur in 1923 and did not see
Gurdjieff again until 1948, the year before he died. Even Fritz Peters, who
had been greatly influenced by Gurdjieff in childhood, and who, as we
have seen, turned to Gurdjieff when he was seriously depressed as an
adult, wrote: He began to seem to me in a very excellent phrase a real,
genuine phony. 42

By the beginning of 1932, it became clear that the Chateau du Prieur
was no longer financially viable. Gurdjieff habitually over-reached himself
financially and American support fell away after the crash of 1929. The
Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man finally closed in May.
But Gurdjieff himself continued to flourish. He lived in Paris throughout
the German occupation of the city during the Second World War.
Characteristically, he obtained credit from various food shops by
persuading them that an American pupil had given him an oil well in Texas
which would ensure that their bills would be settled as soon as the war
was over.

Gurdjieffs cosmogony can only be described as fantastic. Reviewing
his picture of the universe, it is hard to understand that any intelligent,
educated person could believe in it. Yet disciples struggled to read All and
Everything as if its incoherence must contain esoteric wisdom; as if it was
their fault if they did not understand it rather than the authors inability to
construct a credible picture of man and the universe or to write
intelligibly. When Gurdjieff had a car accident in July 1924 which nearly
killed him, he said that this accident was the manifestation of a power
hostile to his aim, a power with which he could not contend.43 This
suggests an underlying paranoid belief system. In reality, he was so
dangerous a driver that his followers avoided being driven by him
whenever possible. Perhaps he was referring to the adverse planetary
influences which, he claimed, had caused the First World War. Gurdjieff
had the bizarre notion that, from time to time, planets might approach
each other too closely. The resulting tension would cause human beings
to slaughter each other without their realizing that they were merely
pawns in a cosmic game.

Although Gurdjieffs picture of the universe can confidently be
dismissed as rubbish, it is possible to salvage a few valuable ideas from
what he taught. Gurdjieff believed that man had obligations as well as
rights. He did not think that the world was made for man, or that progress
consisted in further technological domination of the environment. He
considered that man had lost touch with the meaning of his existence,
which was to fulfill a cosmic purpose rather than merely to satisfy his
desires. Now that we realize that we are destroying the earth we live on,
Gurdjieffs view that man should serve the world rather than exploit it
seems apposite. His notion that most people are asleep and are driven
by their instincts to behave automatically rather than with conscious
intention is probably true of the majority. Some of the charisma which
Gurdjieff undoubtedly manifested sprang from his own capacity to live
intensely in the moment. One pupil recalled his saying:

You live in the past. The past is dead. Act in the present. If you live as if
you have always lived, the future will be like the past. Work on yourself,
change something in yourself, then the future perhaps will be different.44

Some of those who practised Gurdjieffs techniques for awakening people
and transforming them into beings who could direct their own destinies
certainly claimed benefit, but Claire Tomalin, in her biography of Katherine
Mansfield, is almost certainly right in her summing up.

Whether Gurdjieffs methods for righting the internal balance of his
disciples had much, or any, merit is another matter. Since the whole thing
depended on his personality, and made no scientific claims (as
psychoanalysis did) or cosmological and moral claims (as most brands of
Christianity did), it remained an amateur, ram-shackle affair, and although
Gurdjieff aroused passionate hate as well as love, his system seems to
have done little lasting damage, and obviously allowed some people to
change direction in a way that seemed helpful to them.45

As we have seen, Gurdjieff was, by his own admission, an accomplished
confidence trickster who had no hesitation in deceiving other people and
extracting money from them when he needed to do so. Confidence
tricksters are successful at deception because they are more than halfway
to believing in their own fictions. Was Gurdjieff anything more than this? I
suggested earlier that he could not have constructed his elaborate
cosmogony merely in order to deceive. Gurdjieffs picture of the universe,
whether learned from esoteric sources or constructed by himself,
provided him with his own myth, his own answer to the problem of the
meaning of life for which he had sought a solution during his twenty years
of travel. This myth was akin to a religious revelation. It gave him the
certainty of faith. It was his own conviction that he had discovered the
answer which made him charismatic and persuasive. Even if some of his
followers could not accept or understand all his cosmic doctrines, they
still believed that he knew, a phenomenon which we shall encounter when
discussing other gurus.


Responses:
[10026] [10027] [10024] [10021] [10022] [10023]


10026


Date: December 27, 2023 at 22:44:58
From: blindhog 6th sense, [DNS_Address]
Subject: "It was his own conviction that he had discovered the answer which..."(NT)


(NT)


Responses:
[10027]


10027


Date: December 27, 2023 at 22:49:12
From: blindhog 6th sense, [DNS_Address]
Subject: ..."made him charismatic and persuasive." This Quote Says it All (NT)


(NT)


Responses:
None


10024


Date: December 26, 2023 at 00:12:31
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


lol...


Responses:
None


10021


Date: December 25, 2023 at 21:23:45
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?

URL: Anthony Storr


Interesting perspective.. and though it sights a series of 'facts about..' it reads
more, to me, like a thesis of the writer's beliefs, than any sense of an impartial
examination of.. which seems par for the course in that era of psychiatry..

from the link above..

"In his final book Feet of Clay; Saints, Sinners, and Madmen: The Power and
Charisma of Gurus (1996) Storr tracks typical patterns, often involving
psychotic disorders that shape the development of the guru. He challenges
Jesus' mental health by implying that there are psychological similarities
between crazy "messiahs" such as Jim Jones, David Koresh, and respected
religious leaders, including Jesus. His study is an attempt to look at Jesus as
one of many gurus"

As to an impartially description of G's life and his teachings, maybe others
could suggest one or the other, I stopped paying attention to that sort of thing
decades ago.. Even Ouspensky, who's featured prominently in Storr's thesis
had his differences with G. and getting down in that kind of minutia bores me..

But please, share whatever else you find.. if you're so inclined.. it's like a trip
down memory lane.. I haven't thought this much about G in like forever..

Happy happy.


Responses:
[10022] [10023]


10022


Date: December 25, 2023 at 23:31:27
From: old timer, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?

URL: https://forum.culteducation.com/read.php?6,27083,page=1


you may find help at a place like the link. there seem to be people in
several threads on that forum talking about the aftermath of their
experiences.

or this article:
https://nypost.com/2019/11/11/inside-the-alleged-cult-that-has-been-
quietly-operating-in-ny-for-decades/


Responses:
[10023]


10023


Date: December 26, 2023 at 00:09:11
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


Yeah, I know nothing about all that, have never been involved in anything
remotely like it. In fact the only thing I know is Einstein was right in his
quest to find a unifying theory.. and proved, if not its existence, just how
inferior our perception of the universe around us is.

Its a phenomenal place were in. Im amazed, and find cause to be in awe
practically everywhere I look. But all that other stuff? I consider it as I do
music theory. I understand it, at least to a degree, and I appreciate its
definition of sounds perfection, but I certainly dont think of it when I
play. Instead i am inspired, as I am with the truths that harmonize with me
regardless of their origin.


Responses:
None


10019


Date: December 25, 2023 at 17:05:48
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


wow.. it morphs into the dead.. who would have thunk?

touch


Responses:
None


10018


Date: December 25, 2023 at 17:03:31
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


sweet dreams georg...


Responses:
None


10002


Date: December 23, 2023 at 13:42:11
From: blindhog 6th sense, [DNS_Address]
Subject: LOL, What a Crappy Retort. You Don't Know What You Don't Know...


georg wanted to know, so by reading his work,
georg found out.

As you already read gurdjieff, I took your
word for it "I remember one thing gurdjieff
said...if you're defending your position,
you're wrong"

Therefore I then "knew" what I needed to know
about gurdjieff...he's ignorant.


Responses:
[10004] [10005]


10004


Date: December 23, 2023 at 14:45:11
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: LOL, What a Crappy Retort. You Don't Know What You Don't Know...


lol...thanks for playing hog...now back to your sty...


Responses:
[10005]


10005


Date: December 23, 2023 at 14:52:56
From: blindhog 6th sense, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Why, Rover/Spot?? A Google Search Finds:


Pigs are gentle creatures with surprising
intelligence. Studies have found they're
smarter than dogs...

https://www.humanesociety.org pigs
Pigs | The Humane Society of the United States


Responses:
None


9985


Date: December 21, 2023 at 15:40:03
From: old timer, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


perhaps you could answer on the intolerance and disrespect thing before i
commit time during such a busy season? thats not too much to ask is it?


Responses:
[9986] [9988] [9989] [9991] [9994] [9997] [9996] [9992] [9990] [9993] [9995] [9998] [9999] [9987]


9986


Date: December 21, 2023 at 16:06:11
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


sure.. you are both intolerant and disrespectful.


Responses:
[9988] [9989] [9991] [9994] [9997] [9996] [9992] [9990] [9993] [9995] [9998] [9999] [9987]


9988


Date: December 21, 2023 at 16:57:23
From: old timer, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


funny how much that sounds like bopp. is this guy a guru or did he teach
smartassism?


Responses:
[9989] [9991] [9994] [9997] [9996] [9992] [9990] [9993] [9995] [9998] [9999]


9989


Date: December 21, 2023 at 19:17:12
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


i would say he did not suffer fools gladly...


Responses:
[9991] [9994] [9997] [9996] [9992] [9990] [9993] [9995] [9998] [9999]


9991


Date: December 21, 2023 at 20:34:37
From: old timer , [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


so he was an inpatient and intolerant fellow? because most philosophers
look to being open minded and open to different views. did he promote
this intolerance and disrespect of others?


Responses:
[9994] [9997] [9996] [9992]


9994


Date: December 21, 2023 at 21:05:51
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


"philosophers"

I think Gurdjieff is anything but..

I think it's like our naming deities.. as soon as we do we limit what they can
possibly be.. I think you'd find this as a central tenet in some religions that
seek to avoid limiting the creator with labels.. for instance Judaism does this..

I think you'd find that Gurdjieff doesn't fit a common definition of a
philosopher.. nor do most of the others that have tried to elucidate the physics
of our soul.. but rather, he's a man who's upbringing prepared him for a life of
exploring aspects of what Einstein tried to encapsulate with his search for a
unifying theory. And spent the later part of his life sharing what he found.

It's the same stuff the Chinese sought to destroy when they occupied Tibet,
the same stuff white man is trying to deny all of us by destroying life on Earth.
In that way you might call Gurdjieff, if you were to call him anything, a scientist
more than a philosopher..


Responses:
[9997] [9996]


9997


Date: December 21, 2023 at 22:41:07
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


he wasn't a philosopher at all...he was a practitioner...he could DO...


Responses:
None


9996


Date: December 21, 2023 at 22:37:31
From: old timer , [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


dunno dude, the way you guys are so disrespectful and intolerant of
others this sounds like one of those fringe hate groups the media is
always talking about. is there any possibility you two are just confused
and this dude was actually preaching wisdom and openness?


Responses:
None


9992


Date: December 21, 2023 at 20:39:06
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Im curious, how much of Gurdjieff have you read?


he didn't have time to waste...but he was the most spiritual and christian man i have come across in my life, as well as the most knowledgeable...most "philosophers" are idiots...


Responses:
None


9990


Date: December 21, 2023 at 19:22:49
From: blindhog 6th sense, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Meaning You Must Be Very Sad Living With Yourself (NT)


(NT)


Responses:
[9993] [9995] [9998] [9999]


9993


Date: December 21, 2023 at 20:40:12
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Meaning You Must Be Very Sad Living With Yourself


au contraire hog...i am a joy to be around...lol...


Responses:
[9995] [9998] [9999]


9995


Date: December 21, 2023 at 22:25:09
From: Nevada, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Meaning You Must Be Very Sad Living With Yourself


au contraire hog...i am a joy to be around...lol...

...that's great news ryan. I may be within "honking
distance" around Christmas, should I stop by?


Responses:
[9998] [9999]


9998


Date: December 21, 2023 at 22:41:47
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Meaning You Must Be Very Sad Living With Yourself


i'm flying south...


Responses:
[9999]


9999


Date: December 21, 2023 at 23:08:07
From: Nevada, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Meaning You Must Be Very Sad Living With Yourself

URL: V̲i̲nce̲ G̲u̲a̲ra̲ldi̲ - A̲̲ C̲ha̲rli̲e̲ B̲ro̲wn C̲hri̲stma̲s


...maybe sometime after you fly back. Will that be a
night flight?

Vince and Charlie would love to join you.


Responses:
None


9987


Date: December 21, 2023 at 16:37:12
From: blindhog 6th sense, [DNS_Address]
Subject: LOL, You're a Real Case of "The Pot Calling the Kettle Black"(NT)


(NT)


Responses:
None


9947


Date: December 18, 2023 at 21:36:19
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


Heynow, OT.

I think you're robbing yourself of whatever understand might be gleamed by
grokking whatever it is Ry is trying to say. You deserve better, don't you
think? After all, Ry, seemingly, is being sincere in what he's saying, and you,
again seemingly, aren't doing any more than not liking it so are bitching.

Don't you think you'd achieve more by understand what Ry is saying? Like it
or not, wouldn't you'd be better off knowing what's going on rather than
filling the space with complaints? If you don't like it, or don't understand it,
you could of asked for some clarification. Or, you could of just let it go, not
post at all. But instead you bitch? What does that get you?

I am serious. Ry made a few salient points, that reveal aspect of his world
view, doesn't he at least deserve the consideration you would wish if you
posted your thoughts? Really man, it could have gone anyway at all.. why
did you chose this one? What's the point?


Responses:
[9950] [9951]


9950


Date: December 18, 2023 at 23:03:45
From: old timer , [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


been around bopp for many, many years. he often gives reasons for not
being fair and tries to sound wise but really he just enjoys the power to
disrespect people, delete their posts and boot anyone who doesnt agree
with his leftist views. not very many left here because of this behavior.
sorry dude, just not buying his bullshit



Responses:
[9951]


9951


Date: December 19, 2023 at 00:01:18
From: Nevada, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: chatter about my methods


I beg to differ Old Timer. I've been a "left winger"
since the Vietnam War. In my "observation" there are
very few "left wingers" left in this country and
certainly none currently posting on EB.

Hopefully what's going on here is just a "phase" we all
go through to get to a bigger and better role in life.

When you get to the place where you realize that all
life is important and dominance and the accumulation of
power is not, things get a lot friendlier if not better.

This is probably a good time of the year to dwell on
that a little more than usual.

Waiting until next Christmas may be too late.


Responses:
None


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