Difference between revisions of "1983-0610-First-Know-Thyself-Denver"
m (Dmadmin moved page 1983-0610-Denver-Colorado-commercial-recording to 1983-0610-Denver-Colorado: Is not a commercial recording) |
(Update notes) |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
[[Category:Commercial Disk]] | [[Category:Commercial Disk]] | ||
[[Category:Colorado]] | [[Category:Colorado]] | ||
[[Category:Needs Data Template]] | |||
<div id="widthlimiter"> | <div id="widthlimiter"> | ||
== Data == | == Data == | ||
Line 34: | Line 35: | ||
<tr><td>Source | <tr><td>Source | ||
</td><td>N | </td><td>N. Also have DW tapes, 2015. | ||
</td></tr> | </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>No. of MP3 files | <tr><td>No. of MP3 files | ||
</td><td>4 files: 31 min, 32 min; 32 min; 24 min | </td><td>4 files: 31 min, 32 min; 32 min; 24 min. DW version is same | ||
</td></tr> | </td></tr> | ||
Line 46: | Line 47: | ||
<tr><td>Transcription status | <tr><td>Transcription status | ||
</td><td> | </td><td>First pass in process June 2015 | ||
</td></tr> | </td></tr> | ||
Line 73: | Line 74: | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
== | == Notes == | ||
Not a commercial CD – remove Category << check this | |||
Versions: SN and DW | |||
= | SN is 31 + 32 + 32 + 24 min. ; DW is 31 +32 +31 24 = same. | ||
Who s present: M. Casari. | |||
At Amazon.Com there is the following quote from a Denver newspaper article two weeks earlier (need a copy): “Rose says he believes in strong, simple language, discounting the "tons of garbage" written about how man can find himself. -- Rocky Mountain News, Denver, CO, May 28, 1983” | |||
== File 1 == | |||
File 1 = 31 minutes. | |||
One of the themes of this talk is knowing yourself. The other is | At start, sound muddy. Corrected at 4 min, 30 sec with microphone. | ||
dw1-00:00 | |||
One of the themes of this talk is knowing yourself. The other them is accomplishment. This is on every level. I would like to start with this business of knowing yourself. I have brought this up at many lectures over the country, in universities. People take it for granted that the projection they have of themselves is themselves. I heard it when I was younger; I was studying to be a priest in the Catholic religion, and I got exposed to a lot of literature, and exhortations to do this or that. | |||
We do not know ourselves and the people who are in charge of helping us to know ourselves … | |||
e.g., at lecture in Pittsburgh, man in audience said, “I know who I am; I’m the fellow sitting in front of you.” | e.g., at lecture in Pittsburgh, man in audience said, “I know who I am; I’m the fellow sitting in front of you.” | ||
Line 115: | Line 125: | ||
A book, a silver dollar and a whiskey bottle. They claimed that whatever that child picked it did with its life. The reason I mention this is that it shows that people are aware that there’s a destiny to a man. | A book, a silver dollar and a whiskey bottle. They claimed that whatever that child picked it did with its life. The reason I mention this is that it shows that people are aware that there’s a destiny to a man. | ||
== File 2 == | |||
File 2 = 32 minutes. | |||
There’s a desire, even in that baby, a desire to DO what his destiny is. | |||
This is the catch | |||
if you have a desire, you are pretty close to destiny | |||
I mentioned over in Boulder | |||
Napoleon Hill is an esoteric philosopher. And his advice is very accurate. He says you put your whole being into it. | |||
Several books have been written | |||
desire to know our essence, the most important | |||
“now thyself.” | |||
I’m speaking not from proof but from personal experience | |||
keep plowing | |||
you don’t have to quit anything | |||
but when that interferes | |||
Betweenness. It’s a formula that involves a magic in human behavior, and it’s very simple: you take yourself out of it. | Betweenness. It’s a formula that involves a magic in human behavior, and it’s very simple: you take yourself out of it. | ||
when you’re dealing with definition | |||
stepped away from themselves “hey what a jackass you are” | |||
here I was projecting all that I was going to do with this person who had absolutely no chance of any compatibility. This is a tremendous gain when this happens to you; you never do it again. Because you can’t kid yourself. The first person you lie to is yourself. If you lie to yourself and swallow it, God help you. | |||
you’ll start talking to yourself before many years go by | |||
don’t plead guilty. That might be a lie, but don’t have to put your head in a guillotine | |||
no religion greater than friendship | |||
phonies, hucksters, money, selling words | |||
said they were interested only in the business aspect of psychology | |||
pro-rated expenses | |||
gasoline to get here. | |||
I do not make money | |||
once you get into this you can no longer be trusted | |||
take his partnership over | |||
chess game | |||
You’re dealing, not with money that you can recoup, but in a subjective value, which is your life, your essence, your wisdom. | You’re dealing, not with money that you can recoup, but in a subjective value, which is your life, your essence, your wisdom. | ||
tell people what they want to hear, and they’ll pay you | |||
min 8 | |||
putting the whole being into what you’re doing | |||
nothing else has a priority | |||
if that becomes the priority | |||
Driving 30 miles up to | something else is more important | ||
master rating in chess | |||
“Keep your commitment and see what happens.” | |||
they changed the date | |||
a period of rough going | |||
give up certain relationships | |||
Driving 30 miles up to R’s old group in Steubenville. | |||
The purpose of the meetings of course is just to keep it on your mind. If people didn’t get together once a week they would forget. | |||
I wrote this book from a ladder, working as a contractor. I was raising a family and I didn’t have time except when I got home in the evening. These things would all come into my head. | I wrote this book from a ladder, working as a contractor. I was raising a family and I didn’t have time except when I got home in the evening. These things would all come into my head. | ||
Line 139: | Line 213: | ||
Contractor’s Law. | Contractor’s Law. | ||
Why does an evangelist go out and insist on preaching to people? There’s something in a human being that knows he only exists in relation to other people. If you were to die | Why does an evangelist go out and insist on preaching to people? There’s something in a human being that knows he only exists in relation to other people. If you were to die tomoRow and go to a beautiful place but nobody was there, from our memory viewpoint you would be very miserable. | ||
And then you go back and see when did this trauma start. You go back to when you were a very small child. And when you do you clear the road. Once you realize what caused your present foolishness you clear the road, and the likelihood of future foolishness is less. | And then you go back and see when did this trauma start. You go back to when you were a very small child. And when you do you clear the road. Once you realize what caused your present foolishness you clear the road, and the likelihood of future foolishness is less. | ||
Line 165: | Line 239: | ||
Instinctive man falls in love, this is his gets into the devotional center, he respects somebody more than he respects himself. He forgets about all these other games. This is the graduation. The salvationistic experience. He falls in love with Jesus, or Buddha, or someone he can’t see. | Instinctive man falls in love, this is his gets into the devotional center, he respects somebody more than he respects himself. He forgets about all these other games. This is the graduation. The salvationistic experience. He falls in love with Jesus, or Buddha, or someone he can’t see. | ||
== File 3 == | |||
File 3 = 32 minutes. | |||
[continuing on salvation experience] | |||
dw3-00:00 | |||
It’s no great contact with heaven. He loses the worshiping of himself and his body. This is the key to this struggle. And from this comes a marvelous release. And now they say, “I’m saved.” This is the first step in spiritual growth. But why do people leave churches? It’s because these convictions come and go. The computer is saying maybe you’ve snowed yourself. Maybe six months after getting married you realize that you’re no longer worshipping this person; that you’re working because you have to. | |||
My father in law was a Pentecostal minister, they used to call them holy-rollers. He was like the man in Tobacco Road or God’s Little Acre, or one of those little books. He would go out, if he got his hands on too much money, he would go out and get drunk, or he’d get one of the girls from the church and take them out to the irrigation ditch. And he was married and had a family. And he would go back and repent, confess his sins and start all over again. He was a sincere person but he just wobbled. | My father in law was a Pentecostal minister, they used to call them holy-rollers. He was like the man in Tobacco Road or God’s Little Acre, or one of those little books. He would go out, if he got his hands on too much money, he would go out and get drunk, or he’d get one of the girls from the church and take them out to the irrigation ditch. And he was married and had a family. And he would go back and repent, confess his sins and start all over again. He was a sincere person but he just wobbled. | ||
Line 180: | Line 255: | ||
In chemistry you can reach for a certain test. In the process of finding the truth there is only one path to go because truth is not anyplace where you can put your finger on it. You don’t know what the truth is. You’ve got millions of books perhaps to study but don’t know which one to start with. You don’t know what the word truth means. You talk about looking for god; you don’t know what the word God means. In West Virginia they think his last name is Damn. So everybody has their own theology. | In chemistry you can reach for a certain test. In the process of finding the truth there is only one path to go because truth is not anyplace where you can put your finger on it. You don’t know what the truth is. You’ve got millions of books perhaps to study but don’t know which one to start with. You don’t know what the word truth means. You talk about looking for god; you don’t know what the word God means. In West Virginia they think his last name is Damn. So everybody has their own theology. | ||
Now this third stage, the person who is intellectually inclined will free himself in this lifetime - some people die in the emotional phase – others will free themselves from it. | dw3-02:59 | ||
Consequently, what you have to do is avoid the garbage | |||
this is what I did when I was 21 years old. I made up my mind that I would never listen to any cult or movement that charged and reaped enormous sums of money, or even more than it should for basic expenses | |||
at the blood and sweat of slaves | |||
10% basis you only need 10 people | |||
certain rules you follow, another one of them is rank: altar boy, priest, bishop pope | |||
this has no bearing | |||
a certain respect that is unnatural, that this person is holier, more important | |||
authoritatively | |||
you people here are the wisest people on earth for you. | |||
inside, not in a teacher | |||
you are the source of your own wisdom | |||
point the way a little bit | |||
traps, routines | |||
dw3-05:16 | |||
The other thing is secrecy. | |||
they said, “These movements that require secrecy are generally the people who appeal to the wealthy; they just love to be in something that nobody else can get in.” You have to get in by invitation or something. | |||
I spent most of my young years travelling | |||
“What do you know for sure?” | |||
dw3-06:16 | |||
I don’t want to digress too much. I want to go on to this third category. | |||
Now this third stage, the person who is intellectually inclined will free himself in this lifetime - some people die in the emotional phase – others will free themselves from it. | |||
06:53 | |||
I did this. I got into astrology, numerology, the kabala, and I thought that maybe by some confusion of the brain or exercise of the brain I will get something out of this. Because there’s evidently some very wise men in it. When you read the books, they are very astute literature. And then you get a graduation, which I call the Wow experience. | |||
studying algebra or math | |||
the most absurd thing I ever got into | |||
what do you care what x is? | |||
One day it popped | |||
under any stone | |||
a certain Zen training will do it. | |||
logic is a vanity | |||
it will not get you to the truth | |||
thrill in this accomplishment | |||
so you dump it | |||
this is all we have to work with | |||
common sense | |||
emotional sense, which is a feeling | |||
dw3-10:10 | |||
So you go out and you keep looking. You read books, and meet people. | |||
This is what I call the contractors law. This is where those other people come in handy. Because it’s a reflection of yourself. You can go down a blind alley as a philosopher and your good friend will come along and say, “Hey Rose, you know what you’re doing? You’re playing a game inside your own head.” And you’ll realize it when the person points it out to you. Also, the so-called association with those people (sangha) is apt to provide a certain amount of protection for you. I think that in anything that you do, any group of scientists, have to have some sort of coordination between their findings. And this is true for your esoteric scientists as well. | |||
11:17 | |||
dw3-11:28 | |||
And I am learning. I have learned a tremendous lot since I was 50 years of age. My experience occurred at 30. My experience only gave me an answer, it didn’t tell me how I could communicate with other people. It didn’t tell me the mechanisms of the people’s minds and that sort of thing. So you can always learn a tremendous lot. | |||
So what happens in this blind sort of struggling, you floundering | |||
keep pushing | |||
still try to understand. and you have a breakthrough. This is the first breakthrough of any immensity. And it’s called cosmic consciousness in our language. | |||
Richard Bucke | |||
coincidental with this view | |||
tranquility | |||
everything was under control | |||
God was in charge | |||
dw3-13:13 | |||
In Hindu terminology it’s called kevala nirvikalpa samadhi. The word enlightenment is highly misused. Some people think that just being wised-up is enlightenment. No . It’s a decided change and an understanding of your being. | In Hindu terminology it’s called kevala nirvikalpa samadhi. The word enlightenment is highly misused. Some people think that just being wised-up is enlightenment. No . It’s a decided change and an understanding of your being. | ||
Then we go to the philosophical stage | |||
you’re having a relative experience | |||
these are not absolute | |||
but if you transcend the philosophic level, then you’ll have what is called enlightenment, or sahaja nirvikalpa samadhi. | |||
dw3-15:00 | |||
[some noise in the room] | |||
I saw humanity, but I never saw any man with a long beard. Yet I knew the answer. | |||
that you first have an overview, a complete overview, of human life and its purpose. | |||
and the mechanism of its thinking, and the things that are programmed. | |||
dw3-16:13 | |||
You’re programmed. There is no evil, because you’re programmed to respond to the things you do. Maybe to learn. This is one of the errors. Everybody is attacking evil. Ayatollah Khomeini thinks that if he chops your head off he makes you holy | You’re programmed. There is no evil, because you’re programmed to respond to the things you do. Maybe to learn. This is one of the errors. Everybody is attacking evil. Ayatollah Khomeini thinks that if he chops your head off he makes you holy. | ||
You can’t have a physical, frontal assault on a subjective matter. Especially when the subjective matter is only the polarity of another undefined thing called “good”. There is no good not bad, there is only that which the engineer designed. And we’re not smart enough to change it. | |||
ecology | |||
carbon umbrella | |||
poison the streams with tin cans | |||
opposition to nuclear energy | |||
we don’t know why we came out of the ice age | |||
Mt. St. Helen | |||
dw3-18:48 | |||
Let’s get back to some questions. Yes. | |||
18:54 | |||
Q&A | |||
Consciousness is the awareness of the brain. We have a faculty of awareness. We can look at it, in consciousness. Some people think that trees are aware. But they can’t think, perhaps. Maybe I shouldn’t say that. Somehow they don’t have the same introspective qualities. | Consciousness is the awareness of the brain. We have a faculty of awareness. We can look at it, in consciousness. Some people think that trees are aware. But they can’t think, perhaps. Maybe I shouldn’t say that. Somehow they don’t have the same introspective qualities. | ||
The | said that kerosene had signs of life | ||
The ketone enzyme may be aware. The amoeba has to be aware. It gropes, it speculates. That’s awareness. The extent of this consciousness is something else, from our viewpoint at least. | |||
20:16 | |||
Another thing is that you’ll have people who are highly aware and others who are not | |||
walking in a daze | |||
awareness is a fundamental quality. And at the other end of the spectrum is this process observer. A thing that sees without the eyeballs. A thing that watches thoughts. This body watches decisions, like if I pick up an apple it’s a body-decision, the right apple. But the mind that watches thoughts is a higher form of awareness. This has a specific identity. And this identity continues after your mind and your body are gone. | |||
dw3-21:32 | |||
this thing comes in stages | |||
you have to be an egotist until you get strong enough to do it on your own. You can’t think with a diseased body. | |||
methodical way of going about your thinking processes, or you could become a raving fanatic and go bananas, just from the so-called pursuit of the truth. And this is caused from improper thinking. Now what happens is, there’s something wrong with the awareness of your own awareness. You’re unconscious of certain factors | |||
dw3-32 | |||
24 minutes. | But when you realize, your whole thinking mechanism disappears. I talk about fattening up the head before you chop it off. You can’t be a dummy, you can’t say, Oh, I’m going to relax and take one day at a time.” This is nonsense. This is the philosophy of earthworms or rocks. They’re going to be here now; they haven’t begun to be here, much less now. You have to come out fighting. A man fights. The woman surrenders. He fights before he learns to surrender. A woman has the ability to surrender more quickly. | ||
I hope I haven’t drifted too far from what you asked me. | |||
dw3-23:30 | |||
Q. You talked about the process observer ?? ?? | |||
R. Yes, it’s an observer. but an observer isn’t an actor | |||
so is your awareness very passive | |||
sw3-23:56 | |||
There’s a strange thing that happens; I haven’t explained it to you but it’s part of this formulation. While studying your mind, the mind seems to be, the brain seems like a blob of flesh, but the brain has mechanisms in it that I believe are in contact with the mind, and the point of contact is the synapse. It’s like a spark plug, there’s a gap there. And a small voltage crosses the gap in the synapse, and it has to have a purpose in crossing that gap, otherwise it would be continuous wiring. And I believe that this is the contact between the physical, sensory pickup, and the mind that transcends the body. | |||
dw3-24:54 | |||
There’s a book by Moody, Life After Life, and a lot of people | |||
projected astrally | |||
while he was up there he was thinking | |||
not limited to the brain | |||
of course, psychologists don’t accept the mind. | |||
Of course, what they do is simplify their science; you can’t question them too deeply. They’re not going to get into a corner, but at the same time they’re never going to advance the human race on the knowledge of thought | |||
dw3-26:20 | |||
And this is worth looking into: What is thought? And every psychiatrist or psychologist I run into I ask what is thought. But they can’t tell you. Except that it’s a reaction. | |||
that’s too poor an answer | |||
surgical cases | |||
my brother watched his own operation | |||
punctured lungs and who knows what | |||
Army hospital | |||
he watched it from the ceiling. | |||
The ironic thing, his wife was a Nazarene, and he was born and raised a Catholic, same as I was | |||
his wife came up at the same time; they were living in Texas | |||
called him a devil-worshipper | |||
“arguing over a piece of dead meat.” | |||
dw3-28:36 | |||
And so many of these things. The experience that I had in Seattle – this is where this occurred incidentally – I went out the window; this was in broad daylight; Ii went out over the Olympic Mountains, [most times he says Cascades or Cascade Mountains; this is rare] I think it is called. Snow-covered at the time. | |||
if anybody’s interested | |||
it doesn’t do any good to hear the symptoms of it | |||
What struck me most when I came back was that I was aware, and the fellow back in the hotel room wasn’t. He was out. I was just fascinated. I could only think what’s next? So this thinking process doesn’t depend on being inside the body. | |||
And you’ve got to go to the bother of getting some literature. Don’t rest on your convictions or what you were born with, believing. Go out and get some medical history. There’s a tremendous reservoir today of information that was unavailable when I was 21 years of age. You have all sorts of books that are on the bookstands, and none of those were in existence. There were few books in the public libraries, because the public libraries always were run by little old ladies who burnt books that didn’t agree with her religion. So you didn’t get too much to look at then. | |||
dw3-30:14 | |||
But this business of the essence – you get a feeling, not a feeling but a conviction – that there is more than just the body. And we have to pay attention to these scientists who are reporting it, like psychiatrists and medical doctors. And incidentally, in this business of … | |||
[break in tape] | |||
Side dw3 ends at 30:36 | |||
== File 4 == | |||
File 4 = 24 minutes. | |||
dw4-00:00 | |||
In the study of your own essence there are mileposts. These are the mileposts I’m describing. You’ll notice when you change from an instinctive to an emotional man, you’ll notice when you have a more clear understanding of the human mind. And you can look backwards. | In the study of your own essence there are mileposts. These are the mileposts I’m describing. You’ll notice when you change from an instinctive to an emotional man, you’ll notice when you have a more clear understanding of the human mind. And you can look backwards. | ||
For many years it’s very discouraging. You think you’re going nowhere. | For many years it’s very discouraging. You think you’re going nowhere. | ||
foeget about this nonsense. | |||
Q. | |||
R. | |||
Q&A | |||
I didn’t have too much choice. My return, back to the hotel return. Maybe it was supposed to be. When I was young I had a tremendous anger to the phonies. And with that anger came a tremendous determination. | I didn’t have too much choice. My return, back to the hotel return. Maybe it was supposed to be. When I was young I had a tremendous anger to the phonies. And with that anger came a tremendous determination. | ||
Line 230: | Line 528: | ||
Sometime I’m asked, “Why don’t you do something more useful?” There’s nothing useful. “Why don’t you become a healer?” What for? So people can go out and get drunk again and get sick again? That’s just a spinning wheel. | Sometime I’m asked, “Why don’t you do something more useful?” There’s nothing useful. “Why don’t you become a healer?” What for? So people can go out and get drunk again and get sick again? That’s just a spinning wheel. | ||
It was a very personal and possibly selfish motive. There’s nothing wrong with being selfish. | |||
When I walked the streets of Seattle, and it happens today even, people become transparent. I can see their motivations, I can see things they’ve done, I can see pains in their body. This can be tremendously annoying. | When I walked the streets of Seattle, and it happens today even, people become transparent. I can see their motivations, I can see things they’ve done, I can see pains in their body. This can be tremendously annoying. | ||
Line 243: | Line 541: | ||
Well, I’ll give you an example. I studied with a Zen master. | Well, I’ll give you an example. I studied with a Zen master. | ||
Q – Training? | Q – Training? | ||
R – There’s no point in training. This training is to keep people occupied. Especially if you have a group of them in a monastery; you have to do something or they get out of hand. | |||
Q – inaudible – starts to get belligerent. | Q – inaudible – starts to get belligerent. | ||
R - Believe me, I’m going to speak to you from my heart. I don’t know if I have offended you. But a tremendous lot of Zen is useless. The Zen movements in this country are mostly useless. I don’t know if you have heard of Suzuki-Roshi over here in California. He had a little colony there, and shortly before he died he was interviewed, his wife was present, and they said, “Are you an enlightened man?” And his wife said, “Of course he’s not an enlightened man.” And he told her, “You could have kept your mouth shut.” | |||
There’s no in a teacher … Huang Po [story related in Garma Chang’s book?] in China, thousands of years ago, was taking to a group of monks, and he said, “There is no Ch’an in China.” | There’s no in a teacher … Huang Po [story related in Garma Chang’s book?] in China, thousands of years ago, was taking to a group of monks, and he said, “There is no Ch’an in China.” | ||
Q – inaudible. | Q – inaudible. | ||
R – In essence he said that there was no one capable, there was no one being enlightened in China. They had thousands of people in the monastery and no one was enlightened. | |||
Q – continues with belligerent question. | Q – continues with belligerent question. | ||
[Continued arguing, | R – See what you’re doing? You’re no more than a fundamentalist arguing the Bible. The truth is not in words, the truth is in actions and being and becoming. And if you haven’t become, those books aren’t going to do you any good. Keisaku and wearing robes and being dressed like this is not going to do you any good. | ||
[Continued arguing, R eventually dismisses him.] | |||
R reads a few questions from the lecture of questions, to be used in seminar the following day. Goes on about 10 minutes. | |||
Mike Casari announces a seminar next day. This will be [[1983-0611-Seminar-Denver-missing-tape]] | |||
== Footnotes == | |||
== | == End == | ||
</div> | </div> |
Revision as of 15:52, 1 June 2015
Return to list of all Recordings
See all Categories Spreadsheet: Recordings-Source-List
Metadata repository: https://data.direct-mind.org/
Data
Title | 1983-0610-Denver-Colorado |
Recorded date | June 10, 1983 |
Location | Denver, Colorado |
No. tapes | Two 60 minute tapes |
Other recorders audible? | Yes |
DVD number | 2 |
Source | N. Also have DW tapes, 2015. |
No. of MP3 files | 4 files: 31 min, 32 min; 32 min; 24 min. DW version is same |
Total time | 119 minutes |
Transcription status | First pass in process June 2015 |
Published in what book? | |
Published on which website? | |
Remarks | |
Audio quality | Fair to good |
Identifiable voices | Casari |
Notes
Not a commercial CD – remove Category << check this
Versions: SN and DW
SN is 31 + 32 + 32 + 24 min. ; DW is 31 +32 +31 24 = same.
Who s present: M. Casari.
At Amazon.Com there is the following quote from a Denver newspaper article two weeks earlier (need a copy): “Rose says he believes in strong, simple language, discounting the "tons of garbage" written about how man can find himself. -- Rocky Mountain News, Denver, CO, May 28, 1983”
File 1
File 1 = 31 minutes.
At start, sound muddy. Corrected at 4 min, 30 sec with microphone.
dw1-00:00
One of the themes of this talk is knowing yourself. The other them is accomplishment. This is on every level. I would like to start with this business of knowing yourself. I have brought this up at many lectures over the country, in universities. People take it for granted that the projection they have of themselves is themselves. I heard it when I was younger; I was studying to be a priest in the Catholic religion, and I got exposed to a lot of literature, and exhortations to do this or that. We do not know ourselves and the people who are in charge of helping us to know ourselves …
e.g., at lecture in Pittsburgh, man in audience said, “I know who I am; I’m the fellow sitting in front of you.”
If you don’t know yourself you might succeed in one area of life and fail in another; and the failure in the other could be fatal.
When I studied psychology in college it was all behaviorism, Skinner.
You begin to observe yourself, and this observation takes a definite course.
Psychology of the Observer: Observer. Umpire.
Relative thinking, black and white, morals, good and evil, etc. Benoit, conciliatory point.
Minute 15 Intuition. Have to sort innumerable factors. Instantaneous decision. Develop a sense. Efficient. If you correct a your intuition enough you can tell what a person is thinking. Start by guessing.
The next stage is you stand behind yourself and watch these patterns of thinking taking place. You realize now, that you’re no longer an individual with deliberate, purposeful direction.
States of mind.
Moods.
Ninety percent of our troubles start in our own head, not in the enemy, not in the other person.
A third step is taken, and this is the last step, and this is when the process observer, when you pretty much exhausted [the egos] you automatically become – you’ve cleared out all the cobwebs and you don’t know where else to look. You don’t know yourself totally, you just know what to expect under certain conditions. A strange combination. You become aware not of a composite being, but of an observer on one side and an awareness on the other. The investigation of the life inside the human being, thinking objectively, boiling it down just awareness. Etc.
The concentration on the two points of the awareness and the process observer brings you to a state of realization.
You get an overview of exactly who you are and what your purpose is, and all this mechanism below seems to be some fog that’s put between you so that you’ll be a good fertilizer.
A book, a silver dollar and a whiskey bottle. They claimed that whatever that child picked it did with its life. The reason I mention this is that it shows that people are aware that there’s a destiny to a man.
File 2
File 2 = 32 minutes.
There’s a desire, even in that baby, a desire to DO what his destiny is.
This is the catch
if you have a desire, you are pretty close to destiny
I mentioned over in Boulder
Napoleon Hill is an esoteric philosopher. And his advice is very accurate. He says you put your whole being into it.
Several books have been written
desire to know our essence, the most important
“now thyself.”
I’m speaking not from proof but from personal experience
keep plowing
you don’t have to quit anything
but when that interferes
Betweenness. It’s a formula that involves a magic in human behavior, and it’s very simple: you take yourself out of it.
when you’re dealing with definition
stepped away from themselves “hey what a jackass you are”
here I was projecting all that I was going to do with this person who had absolutely no chance of any compatibility. This is a tremendous gain when this happens to you; you never do it again. Because you can’t kid yourself. The first person you lie to is yourself. If you lie to yourself and swallow it, God help you.
you’ll start talking to yourself before many years go by
don’t plead guilty. That might be a lie, but don’t have to put your head in a guillotine
no religion greater than friendship
phonies, hucksters, money, selling words
said they were interested only in the business aspect of psychology
pro-rated expenses
gasoline to get here.
I do not make money
once you get into this you can no longer be trusted
take his partnership over
chess game
You’re dealing, not with money that you can recoup, but in a subjective value, which is your life, your essence, your wisdom. tell people what they want to hear, and they’ll pay you
min 8
putting the whole being into what you’re doing
nothing else has a priority
if that becomes the priority
something else is more important
master rating in chess
“Keep your commitment and see what happens.”
they changed the date
a period of rough going
give up certain relationships
Driving 30 miles up to R’s old group in Steubenville.
The purpose of the meetings of course is just to keep it on your mind. If people didn’t get together once a week they would forget.
I wrote this book from a ladder, working as a contractor. I was raising a family and I didn’t have time except when I got home in the evening. These things would all come into my head.
Contractor’s Law.
Why does an evangelist go out and insist on preaching to people? There’s something in a human being that knows he only exists in relation to other people. If you were to die tomoRow and go to a beautiful place but nobody was there, from our memory viewpoint you would be very miserable.
And then you go back and see when did this trauma start. You go back to when you were a very small child. And when you do you clear the road. Once you realize what caused your present foolishness you clear the road, and the likelihood of future foolishness is less.
Christ said this is the life. You live the life. Twelve apostles and around seventy other brothers.
The truth is recognized by very few people. Bucke one in a million. But the world is run by 51%.
I call it the engineer. The engineering here is manifest. I was just reading in the paper, the trees talk to each other. When insects attack one tree the other trees prepare a poison that is an antidote, puts a stop to the bugs eating them.
Clams.
Sex life of insects.
Right before you have your final experience, the biggest thing you have to face is your own immortality.
Q&A.
I consider Gurdjieff to be the top psychologist of the western world. Astute understanding of the human mind and different types of people. His was a psychological-spiritual philosophy. As physical beings we’re nothing but fertilizer. Unless we have something beyond that it doesn’t matter what we do.
Gurdjieff divided men basically into four classes, and above these five, six and seven were beyond ordinary men. Instinctive man, emotional man, the intellectual man, the philosophical man. The fifth may be enlightened.
Anyhow, we have a transition between, which Gurdjieff didn’t talk about too much.
Instinctive man falls in love, this is his gets into the devotional center, he respects somebody more than he respects himself. He forgets about all these other games. This is the graduation. The salvationistic experience. He falls in love with Jesus, or Buddha, or someone he can’t see.
File 3
File 3 = 32 minutes. [continuing on salvation experience]
dw3-00:00
It’s no great contact with heaven. He loses the worshiping of himself and his body. This is the key to this struggle. And from this comes a marvelous release. And now they say, “I’m saved.” This is the first step in spiritual growth. But why do people leave churches? It’s because these convictions come and go. The computer is saying maybe you’ve snowed yourself. Maybe six months after getting married you realize that you’re no longer worshipping this person; that you’re working because you have to.
My father in law was a Pentecostal minister, they used to call them holy-rollers. He was like the man in Tobacco Road or God’s Little Acre, or one of those little books. He would go out, if he got his hands on too much money, he would go out and get drunk, or he’d get one of the girls from the church and take them out to the irrigation ditch. And he was married and had a family. And he would go back and repent, confess his sins and start all over again. He was a sincere person but he just wobbled.
After you become disgruntled, you realize that you’re emotional and consequently unstable, you don’t have proof. …
I maintain that this idea of the pursuit of truth, should be started off with a scientific procedure with the same strictness with which you would examine the element oxygen or hydrogen in a quantitative or qualitative analysis in or chemistry. It’s that strict. It isn’t fiction. And you can test. There’s a system. Although it’s different from the science of chemistry.
In chemistry you can reach for a certain test. In the process of finding the truth there is only one path to go because truth is not anyplace where you can put your finger on it. You don’t know what the truth is. You’ve got millions of books perhaps to study but don’t know which one to start with. You don’t know what the word truth means. You talk about looking for god; you don’t know what the word God means. In West Virginia they think his last name is Damn. So everybody has their own theology.
dw3-02:59
Consequently, what you have to do is avoid the garbage
this is what I did when I was 21 years old. I made up my mind that I would never listen to any cult or movement that charged and reaped enormous sums of money, or even more than it should for basic expenses
at the blood and sweat of slaves
10% basis you only need 10 people
certain rules you follow, another one of them is rank: altar boy, priest, bishop pope this has no bearing
a certain respect that is unnatural, that this person is holier, more important
authoritatively
you people here are the wisest people on earth for you.
inside, not in a teacher
you are the source of your own wisdom
point the way a little bit
traps, routines
dw3-05:16
The other thing is secrecy.
they said, “These movements that require secrecy are generally the people who appeal to the wealthy; they just love to be in something that nobody else can get in.” You have to get in by invitation or something.
I spent most of my young years travelling
“What do you know for sure?”
dw3-06:16
I don’t want to digress too much. I want to go on to this third category.
Now this third stage, the person who is intellectually inclined will free himself in this lifetime - some people die in the emotional phase – others will free themselves from it.
06:53
I did this. I got into astrology, numerology, the kabala, and I thought that maybe by some confusion of the brain or exercise of the brain I will get something out of this. Because there’s evidently some very wise men in it. When you read the books, they are very astute literature. And then you get a graduation, which I call the Wow experience.
studying algebra or math
the most absurd thing I ever got into
what do you care what x is?
One day it popped
under any stone
a certain Zen training will do it.
logic is a vanity
it will not get you to the truth
thrill in this accomplishment
so you dump it
this is all we have to work with
common sense
emotional sense, which is a feeling
dw3-10:10
So you go out and you keep looking. You read books, and meet people.
This is what I call the contractors law. This is where those other people come in handy. Because it’s a reflection of yourself. You can go down a blind alley as a philosopher and your good friend will come along and say, “Hey Rose, you know what you’re doing? You’re playing a game inside your own head.” And you’ll realize it when the person points it out to you. Also, the so-called association with those people (sangha) is apt to provide a certain amount of protection for you. I think that in anything that you do, any group of scientists, have to have some sort of coordination between their findings. And this is true for your esoteric scientists as well.
11:17
dw3-11:28
And I am learning. I have learned a tremendous lot since I was 50 years of age. My experience occurred at 30. My experience only gave me an answer, it didn’t tell me how I could communicate with other people. It didn’t tell me the mechanisms of the people’s minds and that sort of thing. So you can always learn a tremendous lot.
So what happens in this blind sort of struggling, you floundering
keep pushing
still try to understand. and you have a breakthrough. This is the first breakthrough of any immensity. And it’s called cosmic consciousness in our language.
Richard Bucke
coincidental with this view
tranquility
everything was under control
God was in charge
dw3-13:13
In Hindu terminology it’s called kevala nirvikalpa samadhi. The word enlightenment is highly misused. Some people think that just being wised-up is enlightenment. No . It’s a decided change and an understanding of your being. Then we go to the philosophical stage
you’re having a relative experience
these are not absolute
but if you transcend the philosophic level, then you’ll have what is called enlightenment, or sahaja nirvikalpa samadhi.
dw3-15:00
[some noise in the room]
I saw humanity, but I never saw any man with a long beard. Yet I knew the answer.
that you first have an overview, a complete overview, of human life and its purpose.
and the mechanism of its thinking, and the things that are programmed.
dw3-16:13
You’re programmed. There is no evil, because you’re programmed to respond to the things you do. Maybe to learn. This is one of the errors. Everybody is attacking evil. Ayatollah Khomeini thinks that if he chops your head off he makes you holy.
You can’t have a physical, frontal assault on a subjective matter. Especially when the subjective matter is only the polarity of another undefined thing called “good”. There is no good not bad, there is only that which the engineer designed. And we’re not smart enough to change it.
ecology
carbon umbrella
poison the streams with tin cans
opposition to nuclear energy
we don’t know why we came out of the ice age
Mt. St. Helen
dw3-18:48
Let’s get back to some questions. Yes.
18:54
Q&A
Consciousness is the awareness of the brain. We have a faculty of awareness. We can look at it, in consciousness. Some people think that trees are aware. But they can’t think, perhaps. Maybe I shouldn’t say that. Somehow they don’t have the same introspective qualities.
said that kerosene had signs of life The ketone enzyme may be aware. The amoeba has to be aware. It gropes, it speculates. That’s awareness. The extent of this consciousness is something else, from our viewpoint at least.
20:16 Another thing is that you’ll have people who are highly aware and others who are not
walking in a daze
awareness is a fundamental quality. And at the other end of the spectrum is this process observer. A thing that sees without the eyeballs. A thing that watches thoughts. This body watches decisions, like if I pick up an apple it’s a body-decision, the right apple. But the mind that watches thoughts is a higher form of awareness. This has a specific identity. And this identity continues after your mind and your body are gone.
dw3-21:32
this thing comes in stages
you have to be an egotist until you get strong enough to do it on your own. You can’t think with a diseased body.
methodical way of going about your thinking processes, or you could become a raving fanatic and go bananas, just from the so-called pursuit of the truth. And this is caused from improper thinking. Now what happens is, there’s something wrong with the awareness of your own awareness. You’re unconscious of certain factors
dw3-32
But when you realize, your whole thinking mechanism disappears. I talk about fattening up the head before you chop it off. You can’t be a dummy, you can’t say, Oh, I’m going to relax and take one day at a time.” This is nonsense. This is the philosophy of earthworms or rocks. They’re going to be here now; they haven’t begun to be here, much less now. You have to come out fighting. A man fights. The woman surrenders. He fights before he learns to surrender. A woman has the ability to surrender more quickly.
I hope I haven’t drifted too far from what you asked me.
dw3-23:30
Q. You talked about the process observer ?? ??
R. Yes, it’s an observer. but an observer isn’t an actor
so is your awareness very passive
sw3-23:56
There’s a strange thing that happens; I haven’t explained it to you but it’s part of this formulation. While studying your mind, the mind seems to be, the brain seems like a blob of flesh, but the brain has mechanisms in it that I believe are in contact with the mind, and the point of contact is the synapse. It’s like a spark plug, there’s a gap there. And a small voltage crosses the gap in the synapse, and it has to have a purpose in crossing that gap, otherwise it would be continuous wiring. And I believe that this is the contact between the physical, sensory pickup, and the mind that transcends the body.
dw3-24:54
There’s a book by Moody, Life After Life, and a lot of people
projected astrally
while he was up there he was thinking
not limited to the brain
of course, psychologists don’t accept the mind.
Of course, what they do is simplify their science; you can’t question them too deeply. They’re not going to get into a corner, but at the same time they’re never going to advance the human race on the knowledge of thought
dw3-26:20
And this is worth looking into: What is thought? And every psychiatrist or psychologist I run into I ask what is thought. But they can’t tell you. Except that it’s a reaction.
that’s too poor an answer
surgical cases
my brother watched his own operation
punctured lungs and who knows what
Army hospital
he watched it from the ceiling.
The ironic thing, his wife was a Nazarene, and he was born and raised a Catholic, same as I was
his wife came up at the same time; they were living in Texas
called him a devil-worshipper
“arguing over a piece of dead meat.”
dw3-28:36
And so many of these things. The experience that I had in Seattle – this is where this occurred incidentally – I went out the window; this was in broad daylight; Ii went out over the Olympic Mountains, [most times he says Cascades or Cascade Mountains; this is rare] I think it is called. Snow-covered at the time.
if anybody’s interested
it doesn’t do any good to hear the symptoms of it
What struck me most when I came back was that I was aware, and the fellow back in the hotel room wasn’t. He was out. I was just fascinated. I could only think what’s next? So this thinking process doesn’t depend on being inside the body.
And you’ve got to go to the bother of getting some literature. Don’t rest on your convictions or what you were born with, believing. Go out and get some medical history. There’s a tremendous reservoir today of information that was unavailable when I was 21 years of age. You have all sorts of books that are on the bookstands, and none of those were in existence. There were few books in the public libraries, because the public libraries always were run by little old ladies who burnt books that didn’t agree with her religion. So you didn’t get too much to look at then.
dw3-30:14
But this business of the essence – you get a feeling, not a feeling but a conviction – that there is more than just the body. And we have to pay attention to these scientists who are reporting it, like psychiatrists and medical doctors. And incidentally, in this business of …
[break in tape]
Side dw3 ends at 30:36
File 4
File 4 = 24 minutes.
dw4-00:00
In the study of your own essence there are mileposts. These are the mileposts I’m describing. You’ll notice when you change from an instinctive to an emotional man, you’ll notice when you have a more clear understanding of the human mind. And you can look backwards. For many years it’s very discouraging. You think you’re going nowhere.
foeget about this nonsense.
Q.
R. Q&A I didn’t have too much choice. My return, back to the hotel return. Maybe it was supposed to be. When I was young I had a tremendous anger to the phonies. And with that anger came a tremendous determination.
The people who are able to pick it up are the young people. You have to have an open mind; if you’re crystallized, forget it.
The process of doing this is called creating a vector. You are what you do. The process of becoming doesn’t come from reading; you become a reader.
The amazing thing is what I found was contrary [to my expectations]. Which validated it. When I was going in I thought I’m dying. I’m going out on a limb too far.
When I came back my first thought was I didn’t want to live on this earth.
I felt that if I chose to live I should use that life to the best advantage, so that someone else would know what’s up ahead.
Sometime I’m asked, “Why don’t you do something more useful?” There’s nothing useful. “Why don’t you become a healer?” What for? So people can go out and get drunk again and get sick again? That’s just a spinning wheel.
It was a very personal and possibly selfish motive. There’s nothing wrong with being selfish.
When I walked the streets of Seattle, and it happens today even, people become transparent. I can see their motivations, I can see things they’ve done, I can see pains in their body. This can be tremendously annoying.
At that particular time the human race was nothing more than automatons. When I get into a big city I see the massive robot movement, pounding the pavement with angry determination, going nowhere.
You can’t catch anybody who isn’t already somewhat knowledgeable. I have the impression that some of you are getting ready to get up and leave because it isn’t registering.
If your intuition matches what I’m talking about you’ll be curious the rest of your life.
Long question, mostly inaudible.
Well, I’ll give you an example. I studied with a Zen master.
Q – Training?
R – There’s no point in training. This training is to keep people occupied. Especially if you have a group of them in a monastery; you have to do something or they get out of hand.
Q – inaudible – starts to get belligerent.
R - Believe me, I’m going to speak to you from my heart. I don’t know if I have offended you. But a tremendous lot of Zen is useless. The Zen movements in this country are mostly useless. I don’t know if you have heard of Suzuki-Roshi over here in California. He had a little colony there, and shortly before he died he was interviewed, his wife was present, and they said, “Are you an enlightened man?” And his wife said, “Of course he’s not an enlightened man.” And he told her, “You could have kept your mouth shut.”
There’s no in a teacher … Huang Po [story related in Garma Chang’s book?] in China, thousands of years ago, was taking to a group of monks, and he said, “There is no Ch’an in China.”
Q – inaudible.
R – In essence he said that there was no one capable, there was no one being enlightened in China. They had thousands of people in the monastery and no one was enlightened.
Q – continues with belligerent question.
R – See what you’re doing? You’re no more than a fundamentalist arguing the Bible. The truth is not in words, the truth is in actions and being and becoming. And if you haven’t become, those books aren’t going to do you any good. Keisaku and wearing robes and being dressed like this is not going to do you any good.
[Continued arguing, R eventually dismisses him.]
R reads a few questions from the lecture of questions, to be used in seminar the following day. Goes on about 10 minutes.
Mike Casari announces a seminar next day. This will be 1983-0611-Seminar-Denver-missing-tape