Archive for July, 2010

Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters

July 20, 2010

Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg founded the Beat Movement and were major forces in ushering Buddhism and a free nonduality into the West. A new book – Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters, Edited by Bill Morgan and David Stanford — has received an excellent review in the Los Angeles Times, which is reprinted below.
 
Jack and Allen, in their own words 

An assemblage of about 200 letters between Beat men Ginsberg and Kerouac offers insight into their friendship, their souls and their writing. 

By Robert Faggen,  Special to the Los Angeles Times 

July 18, 2010 

Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg
The Letters 

Edited by Bill Morgan and David Stanford

 Viking: 528 pp., $35

 ”Howl” (1956) and “On the Road” (1957), two works that helped define a time, sprang from two wildly fired, independent imaginations. Few would have put Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac together when they met at Columbia University in 1944. But they became profound friends, inspired in part by the muse of the elusive, multi-vocal Neal Cassady and joined by the brilliantly perverse, professorial elder William Burroughs. Beaten and beatitude — beat, the Beats. There has been as much interest in the style, lives and scenes as there has been in the thinking and the writing. Ginsberg lived his life increasingly with dramatic flair, if not self-promotion. Kerouac appeared to drift soon after the 1950s into drink and solitude. The depth of their development as friends but especially as writers has never been shown more clearly than in this stunning new collection, “Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters.” Consisting of about 200 letters, the book is large and comes with few notes. The letters are sometimes long but almost infallibly interesting. Ginsberg biographer Bill Morgan and David Stanford, a longtime editor at Viking, provide readers with a volume as illuminating as it is indispensable for understanding these writers and their work.
 
Ginsberg and Kerouac divulge here what really seems to matter most — their souls and their writing. There is literary gossip about their compatriots, including, of course, Cassady, Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Herbert Huncke and others. The letters, though, are more often about what each thinks about something vital. It’s fascinating, for example, to hear Kerouac talk about what Cassady had to say after attending a lecture given by Thomas Mann. And if there is a widely held view that Kerouac became a curmudgeon only later in his life, readers might be surprised to find him writing in 1949: “I want to read books, I want to write books, I’ll write books in the woods. Thoreau was right; Jesus was right. It’s all wrong and I denounce it and it can all go to hell. I don’t believe in this society but I believe in man, like Mann. So roll your own bones, I say.” 

Kerouac was responding, in part, to Ginsberg’s struggle with being committed to a psychiatric institute. Kerouac tends to maintain a laconic, sad assurance in his letters. Ginsberg’s missives on his shapeshifting self tend to meander and seem a bit more self-consciously literary. As Ginsberg comes to reject the notion that he’s crazy, Kerouac encourages him as a great young poet. We see Ginsberg entranced by Blake’s visions and by the purity of Bach. And Ginsberg inspires and confirms Kerouac’s yearning for a mythic West meeting a dharmic East. In reading these letters, you feel both writers moving each other toward greater energies of transcendence. 

Faggen is writing a biography of Ken Kesey and is the Barton Evans and H. Andrea Neves Professor of Literature at Claremont McKenna College. 

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times 

Order Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters at Amazon.com.

Interview with Jerry Katz in Non-Duality Magazine

July 15, 2010

Interview with Jerry Katz by Non-Duality Magazine

Read the entire interview here.

NDM: What do you teach by the way. Do you have a method of teaching. Do you do satsangs or anything like that?

Jerry Katz: I don’t teach or give satsang. My work is to bring nonduality to mass consciousness in a variety of ways: Through websites, email forums, a blog, twitter, radio appearances, conference development, public speaking, organizing local gatherings, interviews, publishing e-books, individual correspondences, encouraging and supporting various people in the field of nonduality, writing book reviews. Of course a lot of teachers do those activities, and more, too. If I did teach there wouldn’t be any method. I would look at what each person requires and offer direction and guidance that is right for that person.

NDM: How long have you been doing this work of bringing non duality awareness to mass consciousness?
Can you please elaborate a little more on your work and the impact this has had?

Jerry Katz: I first went onto the Internet in November, 1997. My intent was to bring nonduality “to the streets,” to the spirituality mainstream. At the time, nonduality was a topic and a word largely reserved for discussion within ashrams, the circles of certain teachers, and university departments of philosophy and religious studies, and as well as part of the lesser known teachings of the world’s religions.

The best known nonduality teaching is Zen, which belongs to Buddhist tradition. I wanted to introduce nonduality as a broader Zen. To do that, I introduced the word “nonduality” itself and colored it according to a vision. Just as the word “Zen” has a certain magic and power to it, it is my opinion that the word “nonduality” has its own significant meaning or “color.” I have tried to keep nonduality wide open and all-embracing.

Many people are involved in bringing nonduality to the mainstream. I have provided online spaces for people to gather and talk about nonduality in whatever way they wished and have welcomed and encouraged a number of people. Over the years the broad teaching of nonduality and the word “nonduality” itself have entered the spirituality mainstream and even the general mainstream.

Lives are impacted in different ways. There’s a peaceful, holistic, harmonious, Yogic side to nonduality which benefits a person’s life. It is more about coherence and oneness. Then there is the jarring and harsh side of nonduality — the bottom line nonduality — in which our ego strategies are seen through or split wide open. Knowing who you are requires a cutting away of who you think you are. Practically no one is exempt from that harshness since layers of ego strategy are constantly re-constituting. For living life effectively, I highly recommend the holistic, Yogic type of path. Seeing who your really are, which is the atmosphere in which this effective life is lived (and which it actually is) requires that one question the effective life even while living it. It’s tricky business and only those who have no other choice will engage in it.

Read the entire interview.

A Course in Miracles: The Movie

July 12, 2010

A Course In Miracles The Movie, is a new feature length film (2010) that blends interviews from Guides in the ACIM community such as Dr. Kenneth Wapnick, Gary Renard, Nouk Sanchez, iKE ALLEN, Tomas Vieira, Chad Cameron, and others, with the story of Kate, a woman learning to use A Course In Miracles to understand what special relationships are truly for.

Click here for details.

Meetings in New York with Rupert Spira in July 2010

July 9, 2010

The Essential Nature of Peace, Happiness and Love

Meetings in New York with Rupert Spira in July 2010

Schedule and costs:
Thursday July 15 – 7.30 to 9.30 pm $15
Friday July 16 – 7.30 to 9.30 pm $15
Saturday/Sunday July 17/18 – 11 am-12.30 pm & 2-5.30 pm $150

Booking online for all events is advisable in advance although payment may be made on the door if space permits. Click here for online booking.

Location:
One Spirit Learning Alliance, 330 West 38th St, Suite 1500,
New York, NY 10018 (Between 8th and 9th on W 38th St )

Rupert Spira:

Peace, happiness and love are simply the names we give to the knowing of our own Being as it truly is.

Normally we imagine that our essential Being is a little, vulnerable, conscious entity located inside the body. As such, it is believed to have been born, to exist in time and space, to be subjected to and dependent upon the changes of the body and to be destined to disappear and die when the body dies.

However, if we look clearly and simply at this conscious Being that we intimately and directly know ourselves to be, we find that it has no inherent limitation or location. This experiential understanding may not be formulated in terms such as these but it is well known by all as the experience of peace, happiness and love.

The belief and subsequent feeling that our most intimate Being is limited and located within the body or mind veils the peace, happiness and love that are inherent within it and initiates a search in the realm of objects, activities, substances and relationships, in an attempt to recover the original ease of Being for which we long.

At some point and usually as a result of the inevitable failure of this search, we begin to question the very one who is unhappy and in search, and discover that it cannot be found as a separate, limited entity. Instead we find the intimacy of our own impersonal, unlocated Being and with this discovery the peace, happiness and love that are inherent in the simple knowing of Being, are restored.

And what is it that finds this? Being or Presence is itself all that is present in this recognition, to be able to ‘know’ itself. That is, it finds itself. Presence recognises itself.

In time and as a result of this recognition, the mind, the body and even the world become permeated with the peace, happiness and love that have been discovered in the core of our Being, and all our activities and relationships in the world are subsequently realigned with it. These activities and relationships do not cease as a result of this understanding. In fact, they flourish. However, they now become the means whereby we express, share and celebrate our true nature of peace, happiness and love, rather than a means of securing it.

In our meetings we simply take our stand knowingly as Presence itself and explore the beliefs and feelings that suggest that we are anything less than this absolute freedom and love itself.

Author of The Transparency of Things, Rupert leads meetings and retreats worldwide. Please see his website for further details: http://non-duality.rupertspira.com

Free Newsletter: The Nonduality Highlights

July 9, 2010

Get The Nonduality Highlights

Free since 1998
Click here

Reflections of the One Life, by Scott Kiloby

July 7, 2010

Reflections of the One Life
Daily Pointers to Enlightenment

Scott Kiloby

“This book is written from love to love. It is a daily
reminder of what you already know. Everything
a perfect expression of nothing, which is to say that
the boundary between everything and nothing is not
real. There is only ‘what is.’ That is love.”

July 7th

Resistance in the mirror of relationship

Each relationship is an opportunity to see whether
you are at war with life and others. If a person walks
up to talk to you today, it is an invitation to allow
awareness to fully welcome that person, to listen
intimately to what she is saying, and to be the space
in which she is speaking. This allowing is not a
doing. It is a present recognition that awareness is
always and already open, loving and compassionate.
If there is resistance within you to the person or
what she is doing or saying, the person is acting
as a mirror in which your own resistance is being
revealed. This person is showing you your illusion of
separateness. You are living in a conceptual dream
called self v. other.

When you encounter this “other” today (and
the other includes every manifest object that
appears in awareness) notice any corresponding
resistance in the form of irritation, frustration,
unease, uncomfortableness, anger, or resentment. In
allowing your relationship to people, situations, and
things to be a mirror in which your own resistance is
being reflected back to you, the possibility of waking
up out of that resistance is available.

July 8th

Roles

When you identify with a role, you cannot see your
own identification. You are that role. Perhaps
you are lost in your role as a doctor, secretary, or
salesman. Or perhaps you are lost in some other role
such as recovering addict, cancer survivor, victim, codependent,
or even brother or parent.

Roles are false, egoic identities. When you are
lost in a role, the spirit is not free to react naturally
and spontaneously to life. You are lost in a past
image of yourself. You act and react within the
pattern of that past image. You tend to treat others
according to their roles and how they relate to your
role. If you are a doctor, you see only patients. If
you are a salesman, you see only customers. If you
are a mother, you see only children. Others people
simply reflect back to you your particular role, which
strengthens the role. There is no true relationship
when images are relating to images.

In present moment awareness, there is freedom
from all roles, identities, images, and self-concepts.
You are no longer living life through rigid thought
patterns of the past.You are free to respond to life
intelligently, naturally, and spontaneously.When you
notice each role you are playing in the moment you
play it, you are present.You are transcending that
role.This allows others the freedom to no longer
react from their roles.True relationship is then
possible.

Reflections of the One Life
Daily Pointers to Enlightenment

Scott Kiloby

Amazon.com link

The Myth of ‘Doing Nothing’

July 6, 2010

The Myth of ‘Doing Nothing’

Colin Drake

I recently was talking to a friend who was complaining of existential anxiety; which was dispelled by reading a good book on nonduality or attending an inspiring satsang, but which always returned. So I asked him what he ‘did’ on a daily basis to establish himself in nondual awareness, whereupon he grinned sheepishly indicating that he did nothing. Which made me ponder the teachings of many modern teachers of nondualism who say there is nothing to ‘do’ and everything just ‘happens by itself’. Indeed even in my book Beyond the Separate Self there is a chapter entitled ‘Nothing to Achieve, Find or Get’ which could give the impression that there is nothing that one needs to do … However I can assure you that if one continues to live in the same headspace without ‘doing anything’ then there will no change in one’s outlook and anxiety levels. For as I say in the book:

At a deeper level than this flow of fleeting objects (thoughts and sensations) we are this constant subject, awareness itself; this is already the case and as such cannot be achieved. All that is required is to realize this!

So awareness is central to our being, whilst thoughts and sensations are peripheral. This is self-evident for without awareness our thoughts and sensations would pass unnoticed. Thus we cannot lose this awareness; we just need to stop overlooking it.

It is impossible to get that awareness which you already are, and thus have in full abundance. All that is required is to recognize this. In this respect you do need to ‘get’ this, but this is in fact nothing as it is not a thing but the ‘ground’ from which all things arise, in which they exist and back into which they subside. So there is in fact ‘no thing to get’ and you do need to ‘get’ nothing(ness)!

So although there is:

‘nothing to achieve,’ we do need to realise the deeper level of pure awareness, for this to be the case.

‘nothing to find’, we do need to stop overlooking the awareness that is always present.

‘nothing to get’, we do need to recognize that we already have this awareness.

This realization, or recognition, of the deeper level of pure awareness is easily accomplished by directly investigating our own moment-to-moment experience. My book aims to provide a simple straightforward framework in which this investigation can take place. However even after the recognition of this deeper level we do need to cultivate, and establish, this by further investigation/contemplation for as it says in The Tibetan Book of the Dead:

All those of all [differing] potential, regardless of their acumen or dullness,

May realise [this intrinsic awareness].

However, for example, even though sesame is the source of oil and milk of butter,

But there will be no extract if these are unpressed or unchurned,

Similarly, even though all beings actually possess the seed of buddhahood,

Sentient beings will not attain buddhahood without experiential cultivation.

Nonetheless, even a cowherd will attain liberation if he engages in experiential cultivation.

For, even though one may not know how to elucidate [this state] intellectually,

One will [through experiential cultivation] become manifestly established in it.

One whose mouth has actually tasted molasses,

Does not need others to explain its taste.

Even after one has ‘tasted molasses’ this taste will dissipate after a time, requiring further ingesting for the taste to reappear. In the same way the effect of ‘awakening’ to the reality of the deeper level of pure awareness will dissipate if one ‘nods off’ again and re-identifies with the mind/body. So one needs to continually inquire into/investigate/contemplate the nature of Self and Reality for this ‘awakening’ to become established. It is only in this established awakening that all existential anxiety is banished.

Beyond the Separate Self, by Colin Drake is available at http://nonduality.com/btss.htm

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 259 other followers