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Erik Davis: Lachman on Ouspensky

July 18th, 2008 by Klintron

There are three obvious category of the sort of spiritual seekers who are drawn to esoteric schools: the student, the teacher, and the disenchanted. After fruitful or at least interesting years as a student, Ouspensky gets hung somewhere between teacher and disenchanted-a limbo hardly clarified by his teacher’s insistence that man is entirely asleep, a machine unable to awaken without, well, a teacher. Unable to stay with Gurdjieff, who was a harsh task master and a domineering personality, Ouspensky nonetheless stays with ‘the Work,’ becoming a teacher in his own right, but losing-in Lachman’s well-supported view-the vivacity, friendliness, and romanticism of his earlier years, when his writings were the most creative, the most Ouspenskian. (After completing In Search of the Miraculous, Ouspenksy wrote nothing for decades and then croaked.) At the end of his life, the now thoroughly alcoholic Ouspensky shocks his students by finally and publicly repudiating the work, becoming, in his presentation to them, almost more of a ‘crazy wisdom’ teacher than G. himself.

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Brainsturbator salutes Alejandro Jodorowsky

April 1st, 2007 by Klintron

Brainsturbator has done a salute to Alejandro Jodorowsky that includes a brief biography and excerpts from interviews. I just saw both El Topo and Holy Mountain in the theater here in Portland. El Topo I didn’t really get, but enjoyed watching. Holy Mountain, though, I loved. If you get a chance to see these movies in the theater as part of the current theatrical release, I strongly suggest you do so. Otherwise, the DVDs will be out in a month.

Interesting tidbit from the Brainsturbator profile: Holy Mountain was based on Mount Analogue. I haven’t read it, but I’ve heard great things.

Full Story: Brainsturbator.

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