Archive for the 'Mainstream Media' Category
Lady Gaga Praises Deepak Chopra
May 11, 2010Across the Universe on American Idol
April 23, 2010
Across the Universe
(Lennon, McCartney)
Words are flying out like
endless rain into a paper cup
They slither while they pass
They slip away across the universe
Pools of sorrow waves of joy
are drifting through my open mind
Possessing and caressing me
Jai guru deva om
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Images of broken light which
dance before me like a million eyes
That call me on and on across the universe
Thoughts meander like a
restless wind inside a letter box
they tumble blindly as
they make their way across the universe
Jai guru deva om
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Sounds of laughter shades of life
are ringing through my open ears
exciting and inviting me
Limitless undying love which
shines around me like a million suns
It calls me on and on across the universe
Jai guru deva om
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Jai guru deva
Jai guru deva
What are you watching tonight: American Idol or The Buddha?
April 7, 2010Choose your entertainment:
9PM EST on FOX: American Idol
8PM EST on PBS: The Buddha
The Buddha, A Film by David Grubin
March 29, 2010The Buddha, A Film by David Grubin
Premiering April 7, 2010 at 8 p.m. EST (check local listings)
This documentary for PBS by award-winning filmmaker David Grubin and narrated by Richard Gere, tells the story of the Buddha’s life, a journey especially relevant to our own bewildering times of violent change and spiritual confusion. It features the work of some of the world’s greatest artists and sculptors, who across two millennia, have depicted the Buddha’s life in art rich in beauty and complexity. Hear insights into the ancient narrative by contemporary Buddhists, including Pulitzer Prize winning poet W.S. Merwin and His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Join the conversation and learn more about meditation, the history of Buddhism, and how to incorporate the Buddha’s teachings on compassion and mindfulness into daily life.
Bodhi Tree Bookstore to Close
February 11, 2010This is sad. There was a time when you would go into the Bodhi Tree Bookstore and they would refuse to sell you a book on Kundalini because it was only for advanced spiritual practitioners.
The store had depth and mystery with framed photos of strange gurus on the walls, customers sitting in full lotus in order to “be in” in the atmosphere, and odd, obscure books appealing to the very few.
But times changed.
A few years later it became like, “Hi Guys, welcome to the Bodhi Tree. Our special today is any Kundalini book for five dollars!”
The best days of my life were spent in the Bodhi Tree. Or, rather, driving my ’69 Charger (green with a black vinyl top) from Santa Monica up to the Bodhi Tree, exploring the used and new book stores, buying a few things, maybe picking up one of the free books they often gave away, then dropping into Pinks for a chili dog (sometimes I’d be the only one there), purchasing a good cigar on Fairfax, and taking a long drive back home, leaving behind exhaust and cigar smoke.
If I had all those books and that ’69 Charger today … I’d be rich and happy.
Goodbye Bodhi Tree. There was one small section in your used bookstore that I used to enjoy looking at so I bought all the books in the section. I still have them. Goodbye.
http://www.laweekly.com/content/printVersion/854822
Farewell to the Bodhi Tree Bookstore
Old friend set to close this year
By Gendy Alimurung
published: February 11, 2010
The founding owners of the Bodhi Tree Bookstore are dealing with the closure of their L.A. institution as only spiritualists can. “In our best Buddhist sense, we try to incorporate the idea that things always change,” says Phil Thompson, who, along with Stan Madson, opened the Bodhi Tree 40 years ago. Through the years, their cozy Melrose Avenue shop became a nationally known, much beloved center for Buddhists, astrologers, psychics, yogis, swamis, acupuncturists, naturists and others seeking enlightenment.
Thompson and Madson decided to sell the property to a local business owner who leases space to several other nearby retailers. The store will be closed within a year, they say.
Making the choice was grueling. “This wasn’t a weekend decision where we got out the I-Ching and tossed the coins,” Thompson says.
The history of the Bodhi Tree is, in a sense, a history of L.A. The space was once a costume shop. Before that, it was a house. In those days, the hulking blue Pacific Design Center was a lumberyard, and the fancy furniture stores were gas stations, butcher shops and delicatessens.
In time, hotels and apartments replaced humble single-family bungalows. The 1994 Northridge earthquake scared the Bodhi Tree’s next-door neighbors into moving away. Thompson and Madson bought the neighbor’s property and added a Bodhi Tree annex.
Property values in the area have risen sharply over the years, leading to one of the many quintessentially Los Angeles geographic ironies: The spiritual center where you can learn to divest yourself of all materialism is currently located across the street from chichi boutique Kitson — a favorite of Hollywood ingénues — and a store hawking $10,000 bathtubs.
The neighborhood has indeed grown pricey. Thompson and Madson paid $650,000 for the two properties. The land and structure’s current assessed value is $2.7 million (their real estate agent will not disclose the pending-sale price).
Thompson and Madson were aerospace engineers at Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica before starting the store in their 30s, abandoning a life of science for one of contemplation and meditation.
As aerospace engineers, he and Madson worked on weapons of mass destruction. “We basically figured out how to make them more destructive,” Thompson says. “Missiles in space. That’s what we did.”
But the two men reached their limit at “the thermonuclear-war part,” Madson says. “We said, ‘We don’t want to do that.’ ”
Their bookstore filled a need, the men found. People were asking, “Who am I? What am I doing? Where is my life going? What are we really doing here?”
The two are now in their early 70s. They speak slowly. Madson is more reticent. Thompson has a slyer sense of humor.
Characteristics of the engineer persist in them, however, as they deconstruct the architecture of the Bodhi Tree’s breakdown.
Their book sales have been declining for 15 years. The material they sell was once hard to find, giving the Bodhi Tree a strong presence in a niche market. But over the years, that material has grown in popularity, and gone mainstream. In a way, they have proselytized themselves out of business.
“Twenty years ago we felt like it was an expanding situation,” Madson says. “We were concerned the store was getting too big. We had a staff of 100. Publishing was expanding. Spirituality was expanding. But what changed was that the market became widely dispersed.”
“We’re no longer the only place in half the country that has this material,” Thompson adds.
Books on Wicca and Santeria and Native American shamanism used to be tough to find. Now every Borders and Barnes & Noble carries them. What can’t be bought at a brick-and-mortar shop can undoubtedly be found online, inexpensively. Madson quotes a figure: 50 percent of all spiritual books sold in the U.S. are bought on Amazon.com.
Another blow came when international shipping rates rose. People who ordered from overseas defected to Amazon, which could save on rates by shipping from its various branches around the globe.
As if that weren’t enough, the Bodhi Tree’s parking situation deteriorated. When the area incorporated into West Hollywood, most of the surrounding streets became “permit only.” Customers stopped coming literally overnight.
The men are hazy on exactly when that took place. “It’s not one of the pleasant memories,” Thompson says wryly. Eventually, the question of how much to grow the store became one of how long to hold on.
Letting go has been tough. The place has the feel of an old friend. The floors creak. The walls are permeated with the smell of incense. Two chubby bookstore cats roam the aisles and pause to be petted by customers who know each kitty by name. Thompson and Madson built most of the wood shelves and fixtures themselves.
On a recent day, Thompson walks the familiar aisles, noting the pictures of gurus on the walls. He tidies books in the UFOs and Inner Healing sections, passes an entire shelf of Wayne Dyer titles, and ends up in the backyard. “This is where we have the pagan rituals,” he says, half-joking.
People have been asking if they have made any provision for the real Bodhi tree growing in the backyard parking lot. It was given to them by a neighbor 30 years ago as a potted seedling. It is now heavy with figs and deeply rooted in concrete, with a trunk too big to put your arms around. They don’t know what will happen to it. Thompson figures the tree will be destroyed, chopped into firewood by the new owners.
Thompson prefers to believe that the bookstore has helped people who were lost, who were trying to discover who they are — whether that journey was through Buddhism, Taoism, Judaism, Christianity or Islam. Both men worry about what will happen to the community once the store is gone. Where will people go for spiritual solace? “Perhaps a wealthy philosopher-entrepreneur will come in to buy the store and keep it going,” Thompson suggests. “A sort of philosopher king. Or queen.”
Madson believes that to continue, the store needs vitality, new energy and vision.
“We’re old-school booksellers,” he says. “We like that model. I’m not sure we’re the ones who should lead it into the next stage.”
Thompson’s 20-something son had ideas for the property before it was sold: He wanted to turn it into a microbrewery and surf shop.
The young man said he would “keep some of the books around,” Thompson mutters, shaking his head. “On the other hand, he does make pretty good beer.”
~ ~ ~
More photos of the Bodhi Tree Bookstore here:
http://www.bodhitree.com/gallery/bookstore/large.html
Real Life Avatar Situation
February 9, 2010Mining giant slammed over sacred land
UK mining resources giant Vedanta was criticised today for planning to exploit an Indian forest held sacred by tribal people without their “informed consent,” following an appeal to Avatar’s director James Cameron for help.
Amnesty International attacked Vedanta’s plans to mine vast deposits of bauxite in the Niyamgiri Hills of eastern India without consulting the 8,000-strong Dongria Kondh tribe, who worship the land.
The tribe believes the lush hills are the home of its god Niyam Raja and they depend on the land for their crops and livelihood.
Their plight chimes with the tribe in Cameron’s hit movie Avatar, who seek to stop humans from mining under their sacred “home tree.”
Survival International, a group which campaigns on behalf of indigenous people, appealed Monday to Cameron to help stop the mine going ahead in an advertisement in US entertainment magazine Variety.
The opencast mine planned by India-focused Vedanta is intended to feed a nearby $US900 million ($1,030.77 million) alumina refinery already built by the company in the mineral-rich Orissa state.
Amnesty also said in a report the refinery, which is being fed with bauxite from other Indian states, is already causing air and water pollution that “threatens the health of local people.”
Nonduality in the movie Avatar
December 27, 2009Marcos Vazquez writes the following in his Live Journal:
Avatar
* Dec. 26th, 2009 at 5:13 PM
I went to the movies yesterday to see Avatar, and while quite predictable at times, it struck a chord with me because it somehow reflects some of my own beliefs. The way the na’vi can bond with animals, with trees, with their ancestors, how they understand that they are simply ‘borrowed’ energy from the same source (Ai’wa), to which they all return in the end… It pretty much aligns with the concept of One-ness, of Non-Duality, understanding that we are not only related to everything else, but that we are one and the same.
The movie also sends a clear message about the way humans treat this earth and all creatures on it, about how everything seems to be justified in the name of ‘progress’, of ‘enrichment’… it reminds me of a native american proverb, “Only when the last tree is cut, only when the last river is polluted, only when the last fish is dead, will they realize that they can’t eat money”.
-Marcos Vazquez
“I was only my consciousness and nothing else”.
November 24, 2009from
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/23/man-trapped-coma-23-years
Trapped in his own body for 23 years – the coma victim who screamed unheard
• Misdiagnosed man’s tale of rebirth thanks to doctor
• Total paralysis masked fully functioning brain
* Kate Connolly in Berlin
* guardian.co.uk, Monday 23 November 2009 13.13 GMT
For 23 years Rom Houben was imprisoned in his own body. He saw his doctors and nurses as they visited him during their daily rounds; he listened to the conversations of his carers; he heard his mother deliver the news to him that his father had died. But he could do nothing. He was unable to communicate with his doctors or family. He could not move his head or weep, he could only listen.
Doctors presumed he was in a vegetative state following a near-fatal car crash in 1983. They believed he could feel nothing and hear nothing. For 23 years.
Then a neurologist, Steven Laureys, who decided to take a radical look at the state of diagnosed coma patients, released him from his torture. Using a state-of-the-art scanning system, Laureys found to his amazement that his brain was functioning almost normally.
“I had dreamed myself away,” said Houben, now 46, whose real “state” was discovered three years ago, according to a report in the German magazine Der Spiegel this week.
Laureys, a neurologist at the University of Liege in Belgium, published a study in BMC Neurology earlier this year saying Houben could be one of many cases of falsely diagnosed comas around the world. He discovered that although Houben was completely paralysed, he was also completely conscious — it was just that he was unable to communicate the fact.
Houben now communicates with one finger and a special touchscreen on his wheelchair – he has developed some movement with the help of intense physiotherapy over the last three years.
He realised when he came round after his accident, which had caused his heart to stop and his brain to be starved of oxygen for several minutes, that his body was paralysed. Although he could hear every word his doctors spoke, he could not communicate with them.
“I screamed, but there was nothing to hear,” he said, via his keyboard.
The Belgian former engineering student, who speaks four languages, said he coped with being effectively trapped in his own body by meditating. He told doctors he had “travelled with my thoughts into the past, or into another existence altogether”. Sometimes, he said, “I was only my consciousness and nothing else”.
The moment it was discovered he was not in a vegetative state, said Houben, was like being born again. “I’ll never forget the day that they discovered me,” he said. “It was my second birth”.
Experts say Laureys’ findings are likely to reopen the debate over when the decision should be made to terminate the lives of those in comas who appear to be unconscious but may have almost fully-functioning brains.
Belgian doctors used an internationally-accepted scale to monitor Houben’s state over the years. Known as the Glasgow Coma Scale, it requires assessment of the eyes, verbal and motor responses. But they failed to assess him correctly and missed signs that his brain was still functioning.
Last night his mother, Fina, said in an interview with Belgian RTBF that they had taken him to the US five times for reexamination. The breakthrough came when it became clear that Houben could indicate yes and no with his foot.
“Powerlessness. Utter powerlessness. At first I was angry, then I learned to live with it,” he tapped out on to the screen during an interview with the Belgian network last night, AP reported.
Laureys, who is head of the Coma Science Group and department of neurology at Liege University hospital, has advised on several prominent coma cases, such as the American Terri Schiavo, whose life support was withdrawn in 2005 after 15 years in a coma.
Laureys concluded that coma patients are misdiagnosed “on a disturbingly regular basis”. He examined 44 patients believed to be in a vegetative state, and found that 18 of them responded to communication.
“Once someone is labelled as being without consciousness, it is very hard to get rid of that,” he told Der Spiegel.
He said patients suspected of being in a non-reversible coma should be “tested 10 times” and that comas, like sleep, have different stages and need to be monitored.
Houben hopes to write a book detailing his trauma and his “rebirth”.
Namaste for the Gods, the Guru, and Kelly Ripa
September 14, 2008I was watching Meg Ryan on the Regis show and as her interview ended she signified her departure to Regis’s co-host Kelly Ripa by bringing her hands together prayer-like in front of her forehead. That is to say, Meg presented the sign meaning Namaste.
Namaste means “my soul and your soul are one,” according to nonduality teacher Dr. Jean Klein. Further, Klein points out in the video Discovering the Current of Love, that when the hands are held at heart level it is intended for your neighbor and all people. When the hands are brought to forehead level it is a namaste for the Guru. When the hands are held over the head, Klein says, this is namaste for the gods.
On the Regis show, Meg Ryan brought her hands to forehead level, signifying to Kelly Ripa that this namaste was for “the Guru.”
So, what Guru do Meg Ryan and Kelly Ripa share or recognize? More broadly, what is the spiritual connection between Meg Ryan and Kelly Ripa?
How deep, diverse, and widespread is the teaching of nonduality throughout Hollywood? I think it is prevalent and takes the forms of Tibetan Buddhism, Eckhart Tolle-ism, Kabbala, and open Christianity ala A Course in Miracles. That’s only a few.
It’s all over the internet that Jeff Goldblum is reading Talks with Ramana Maharshi.
Acclaimed British actor Terence Stamp has voluntarily read the audio version of David Carse’s most nondual Perfect Brilliant Stillness.
Legendary Richard Beymer has written the wild and penetrating nonduality book, Impostor, a creation that should be made into a movie.
Since my work in nonduality over the last ten years has been to bring nonduality to “the people,” it makes sense that I would try to gauge how nonduality has penetrated the lives of people within certain groups. The mass entertainment group is interesting since it could spread the teaching of nonduality very broadly, if, perhaps, not too deeply.


