2022/06/23

Being Ram Dass by Ram Dass, Rameshwar Das, Anne Lamott - Ebook | Scribd

Being Ram Dass by Ram Dass, Rameshwar Das, Anne Lamott - Ebook | Scribd
Being Ram Dass

Being Ram Dass

5/5 (9 ratings)
739 pages
21 hours

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Description

Perhaps no other teacher has sparked the fires of as many spiritual seekers in the West as Ram Dass. If you've ever embraced the phrase "be here now," practiced meditation or yoga, tried psychedelics, or supported anyone in a hospice, prison, or homeless center—then the story of Ram Dass is also part of your story.
 
From his birth in 1931 to his luminous later years, Ram Dass saw his life as just one incarnation of many. This memoir puts us in the passenger seat with the one time Harvard psychologist and lifelong risk-taker Richard Alpert, who loved to take friends on wild rides on his Harley and test nearly every boundary—inner or outer—that came his way.
 
Here, Ram Dass shares his life's odyssey in intimate detail: how he struggled with issues of self-identity and sexuality in his youth, pioneered psychedelic research, and opened the doorways to Eastern spiritual practices. In 1967 he trekked to India and met his guru, Neem Karoli Baba. He returned as a yogi and psychologist whose perspective changed millions.
 
Populated by a cast of luminaries ranging from Timothy Leary to Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, Allen Ginsberg to Sharon Salzberg, Aldous Huxley to Alan Watts—this intimate memoir chronicles Ram Dass's experience of the cultural and spiritual transformations that resonate with us to this day,  a journey from the mind to the heart, from the ego to the soul.
 
Before, after, and along these waypoints, readers will encounter many other adventures and revelations—each ringing with the potential to awaken the universal, loving divine that links this beloved teacher to all of us.
 
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Jt O'Neill
Mar 30, 2021rated it really liked it
I was a college student in the mid 1970’s when Be Here Now was making a splash on college campuses across the country. Yes, I was intrigued with the author Ram Dass and curious about the path that took him to writing this unique book. I will admit that Be Here Now was not an easy book for me to read. One reason is that the formatting does not follow the usual book publishing rules. I had to physically adjust myself and work just to read it. The different formatting along with the dark writing on dark pages and the intricate illustrations made it uncomfortable to read but so did the actual text. It was all unfamiliar territory for me. I was from a working class Catholic family and I needed help just understanding these new concepts.

Eventually, I grew in depth and understanding. Eventually, I came to greatly appreciate the work of Ram Dass and I grieved when I learned of his death in December of 2019. I was delighted to see that his autobiography would be published posthumously in early 2021.

Being Ram Dass is four hundred pages of a life story. There is a lot of minutia, some of it interesting, some of it monotonous. Although I enjoyed reading the sections on his childhood and his work at Harvard and Stanford detailed in Parts I and II, I was also familiar with those years as he had summarized them in the opening (non numbered pages) of Be Here Now. Those twenty or so pages will offer a reader the background to the rest of his life but I did enjoy his storytelling. He weaves together names, places, and events of the era in an engaging fashion.

For me, Parts III, IV, and V were more compelling. Throughout his life, Ram Dass took charge of his own story but these sections detail the compassion and grace that made his life so remarkable. He does not hold himself up to be a model of a perfect human being. In fact, he holds himself accountable for his humanity and yet he resonates with light and wisdom. I was especially interested in his path as he looked carefully at aging and dying.

For me, this book was more of an autobiography than a memoir. What’s the difference, you ask? The difference is in the details. An autobiography, told in the first person, tends to focus more on the facts of a person’s life. A memoir, also told in the first person, might reveal facts but tends to focus more on reflection and the author’s emotional response to events of their life. In my ideal book, Ram Dass would have paired down some of the minutia and written even more from the heart about his life story. Don’t get me wrong. He did write from the heart but sometimes that writing got buried in details. Another reviewer suggested that if some of the pages get too bogged down, just read the opening sentence in each paragraph and you will get the general idea, freeing you up to focus on the more engaging sections. That’s advice worth considering.

If you are interested in the 1960’s/1970’s, the counterculture, and research on psychedelic experiences, this book might appeal to you. If you are looking for a model of compassion, openness, and truth then this book will definitely appeal to you. Ram Dass was a gift to us from the Universe. He taught us how we are all walking each other home and I found his words to be thoughtful and inspiring.
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M. Sarki
Jan 04, 2021rated it it was amazing
Shelves: 5-star-wonders
https://rogueliterarysociety.com/f/be...

…”No matter what someone else does to you, never put anyone out of your heart.”__Maharaji-ji

That creed is not something I was ever gifted with. Life has many pitfalls and I found plenty of them. However, I was first introduced to the writings and lectures of Ram Dass back in the late sixties, early seventies. I liked both him and his work then and I certainly love him now. One pretty cool dude. Ram Dass has always been consistent in his representation of pure love and words of wisdom. Sad to know he passed from this life but his body did outlast most of his peers. This autobiography was written over the last ten years of his life. Interesting to learn what was behind his very public service and get a bit of insight into the other players in his continually evolving sphere of influence. The humility of Ram Dass comes through his writing, though he never truly suffered from any monetary lack which is the plight it seems for many of us. Richard Alpert was born into wealth and privilege which for me casts a shadow at times on his lifetime of good work and self-realization, but it was comforting to know he gave it all away. Any money he made from lectures or the sales of his books was put back into his foundations.

...My intellectual explorations made me think about who I was. I became an observer of my thoughts, learning how to watch how my mind changed. I became curious about the motivations that propelled me and others. Little did I realize that this observer stance would become important...I had just found the “I”—that perceptual point of view, that essence of identity, that scanning device. I’d found that place of awareness beyond form, where “I” exists independent of social and psychological roles. This “I” was beyond space and time…

LSD offers this like-experience. Of course, I had felt it all along in my sober self, but using LSD gave me a first-hand intense lesson on getting outside of one’s self and being witness to it. As in not reacting. Simply watching and observing what might, or might not, unfold. Steve Jobs maintained that everyone should take a hit of LSD at least once. Not a bad idea.

...Suddenly, sitting there, it occurs to me that if Maharaj-ji knows my thoughts about my mother, then he knows all my other thoughts too—including all the things I’m most ashamed of…

The quotation above reflects the astounding idea, and fear, of growing up a Lutheran that our dear God should know everything about me no matter what. Frightening, and for my part cause for extreme consternation. The same phenomenon of a fellow human being over in India knowing everything about me, all my secrets, guilt, and shame, just might be enough for my head to explode, and is something fortunately I have yet to have happen to me. It happened to Richard Alpert.

...We said that compassion is beyond sympathy or even empathy. It literally means being with another’s suffering. It includes the wisdom of impermanence and the understanding that personal narratives are not so important in the larger scheme of things…

Nearing my own passing due to the sheer mathematics of my advancing age is propelling me into a more rigorous study on how I might better prepare for my own end days. I understand this is something we now all should be practicing every day, but rarely do we. My having a family member struggling on all levels while dying of cancer brings this book into even better focus.

...Contentment is an attitude of the soul…Maharaj-ji said no one can die a moment before his or her time or live for a moment past it...

A joy to read and well-written, Being Ram Dass is as good as it gets, unless one had the pleasure and good fortune of being present in his midst. I have yet to subscribe to all these beliefs, but there are plenty of them for me to chew on in what remains of my time on this earth.
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Luke Schalla
Feb 16, 2021rated it it was amazing
Simply an account of the dance of a yogi’s soul as he journeyed home.

“Love holds the universe together. Love is the emotion of connection and merging. Viewed from the soul, the world is a manifestation of love. Love is the bridge, the transfer of energy between form and formless, matter and spirit.”
Aishwary Mehta (The_Fugitive_Biker)
20th book of 2021 (188 Books read overall)

Quote from the Book I Liked ‘At times, I feel like I’m on a spiritual staircase, looking back at my former selves on the landing below, while above I am the witness, ensconced in my soul, watching myself traverse the steps in this incarnation.’ (Page no. 6)

Rating - 5 Stars

*Important take from the book* We hold memories, yes, but we are not those memories. We are who we are, today. (Page no. 332)

Plot Summary Set against a
 ...more
Italiangirl
Dec 24, 2021rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
I learned about Ram Dass ( given name Richard Alpert) when I was in college in Boulder during the first year of Naropa Institute. He was giving talks along with Bhagavan Dass, Alan Ginsberg and many others. I remember how enthralled I was with the whole scene. Shortly after, I wrote Ram Dass a letter about a dream I had and he was in it. He actually responded with a note that said,” where I am is closer than than in your dream”. Over the last 40 years I’ve read a few of his books and attended some of his talks. My spiritual path is aligned with much of his philosophy; his experiences with Maharaj-ji and with his understanding of death and the importance of service. Maharaj-ji became even closer to him after he died (or left his physical body )also known as Neem Karoli Baba, and I’ve experienced the same thing with my spiritual teacher.
This isn’t much of a review of the book! It’s his autobiography and he tells the story with the right amount of history, drama, humor and deep honesty about his unfolding to who he really is. I especially liked the last chapters which described his new awareness of himself after his stroke, and the humbleness that developed because of it. Ram Dass died shortly after he finished this book. I’m sure he was ready. Love, serve, remember… Thats what his life was about, and that’s a beautiful direction for us to follow.
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Ruth
Oct 16, 2020rated it it was amazing
Ram Dass began working on this nearly-400 page biography in 2010 at the insistence of his friend and co-author Rameshwar Das. Considering the last 10 years of his life were physically agonizing it took much persistence to complete.

Ram Dass begins with his childhood as Richard Alpert ,born to a wealthy New England couple., giving a portrait of his family and family dynamics. He spends quite a bit of the book delving into his childhood and also the psychedelic era he and Tim Leary helped shape and evolve.

Toward the middle of the book, goes to India on vacation and meets his guru Neem Karoli Baba aka Maharaj-ji, who gives him his spiritual name Ram Dass. Many experiences living communally with devotees, his nearly 20 year committed relationship with another man ( who he identifies as ‘Peter’) . This period also involves social action and reaching out to prisons and hospitals to do meditation there,

The last part Ram Dass talks
about moving to Maui and becoming enthralled with the island’s vegetation , the ocean, the air, the rain.
He discusses determined early work is this.

The writing sounds like his speaking, his with his wry humor and deep insights in conversational tone. Many thanks to Net Galley and Sounds True for e-ARC.
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Sam Bradley
Jan 27, 2021rated it it was amazing
This is a beautiful book written more as inner and spiritual growth than a summary of triumphs and failures. There are touching lessons throughout the book sprinkled with humor and insight.
I found myself wondering if maybe he got too high on psychedelics and the rest of his life was a result of just flying too close to the sun, but I didn’t get that sense. He and another Harvard professor Timothy Leary are basically responsible for introducing the western world to psychedelics in the 60’s. To me, Leary seems have gotten too high while Ram Dass moved on and used those experiences as a catalyst for deeper meaning, inner growth and teaching. Psychedelics aren’t the theme of the book if someone is looking for that; but I did find it interesting they were experimenting with psychedelics in the early 60’s at the same time lobotomies were still being widely performed.

To me there are two ways of looking at his book. In a psychological sense it’s a marvel the way he looked at things. The positivity he found in situations, the lessons he saw in things, how he handled relationships or inner and outer strife.
On the other hand, not trying to measure how he interacted and viewed things and just letting my mind wander with the magical feel the book is filled with...wow.
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Finja
Mar 02, 2021rated it it was amazing
Shelves: spirituality
What a life. So inspiring. Incredibly grateful for the existence of this book. 🤍
Miglė
Jun 16, 2021rated it really liked it
what a journey. what a trip.

when talking about great books, I often hear people discussing character development, and it's so damn rich in here.

a misunderstood kid.
a Harvard professor.
a researcher of psychedelics.
a guru.

talk about a character arc. going from simply learning about ideas, to sharing them, to applying them, to creating them. a circle of life.

and that matters, as it seems like everyone knows what to do and yet barely anyone actually acts on their exquisite knowledge.

"when you get the message, hang up the phone".

on top of that, he got to hang out with Allen Ginsberg, Alan Watts and Aldous Huxley all the time, which sounds like a recipe for greatness on its own (or a perfect answer to "who'd you have for dinner, dead or alive").

“we're all just walking each other home.”
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Nathalie
Mar 29, 2021rated it really liked it
Although the facts, names and details were overwhelming for someone not familiar with Ram Dass, this book creates the right atmosphere for a deeper understanding of the man and his look on the cosmos.

My suggestion if you find the details of some sections make you nod off: start reading the first sentences of paragraphs only, you'll get the idea and you can concentrate on the more engaging pages.
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Sangeeta Gupta
Feb 05, 2022rated it really liked it
Thank you so much Indic Book club for sending me this book
Perhaps no other teacher has sparkled the fires of as many spiritual seekers in the west as Ram Dass. If you have ever embraced the phrase "be here now" practiced mediation or yoga, tried psychedelics, or supported anyone in a hospice, prison or homeless center then the story of Ram Dass is also a part of your story.
This book is a memoir that puts us in the passenger seat with the one-time Harvard psychologist and lifelong risk taker Richard Alpert, who loved to take friends on wild rides on his Hatley and test nearly every boundary- inner or outer that came his way.
Here, Dass shares his Journey of life in very detail . How he struggled, pioneered psychedelic research and opened the doorways to eastern spiritual practices.

This book is also about the internal journey. Who I am is awareness and deep love, a presence beyond experience within a temporal, changing form. Who I am is soul, a soul without name, address, social security number, or biography, who isn't born and doesn't die. I am
Complete book is divided into 5 parts and there are total 36 chapters. Book is little thick and it may take long time and patience if you are a slow reader like me.
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Jill Reads
Jan 16, 2021rated it it was amazing
Wow. I absolutely loved the autobiography, “Being Ram Dass.” At 488 pages, it is a long, beautiful and comprehensive look at his two lives. We meet Richard Alpert, the chubby Jewish kid-turned Harvard psychology professor who used psychedelics in his research. And we watch Richard transform into Ram Dass when he met his guru in India. Ram is well-known for bringing to the West a heightened awareness of Eastern spirituality and practices.

If you’ve read Ram Dass’s best-known book Be Here Now—referred to as the counterculture Bible—you’ll find a repeat of those stories. But this memoir (which took 10 years to write) is also chock-full of new stories. We learn much more about his well-heeled East coast family, his fundraising efforts for charitable causes, his spiritual efforts to help those in prison as well as in hospice care. And of course we witness his journey after his debilitating stroke.

Ram was in this lifetime for nine decades, so he has witnessed everything between the Great Depression to the ability to teach thousands via the internet. Of course, he has much to say about cultural events, spiritual transformation, social psychology the ego and his professional ups and downs.

Ultimately, Ram Dass shares an uplifting message of humility, being of service and practicing lovingkindness. I think this book will have a much wider appeal than just to hippies and yogis. If you’re looking for a way to connect spiritually, it might just be a great fit for you.


Special thanks to his longtime publisher, Sounds True, for an advanced digital copy of the book via NetGalley. I also purchased the audiobook and listened along while reading. Rameshwar Das did a wonderful job in helping to write, edit and narrate the book.
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Dan Secor
Feb 01, 2021rated it it was amazing
Come for the Acid trips, stay for the enlightenment ....

Or, If Richard Alpert/Ram Dass didn't exist, mankind would have had to make him up.

Throughout my adult life I have searched for a form of spirituality that I could identify with and settle into. About 15-20 years ago, I settled in Buddhism with some Taoism and Hinduism sprinkled in. I have been to several meditation and/or yoga retreats to Kripalu in Western Mass. over the years, including a couple where I have met some amazing people and learned so much about myself.

However, the political polarity and COVID anxieties have led me to stray from my practice. My tipping point came this past weekend when a much anticipated training for meditation teacher training left me feeling empty. And then came this wonderful autobiography.

Without going into details about this amazing man's transformation, I will say this. Ram Dass was a self-acknowledging flawed man who grew up in privilege and recognized the power of ego, only to give himself to teaching and love. He finished this book (with Rameshwar Das) very shortly before his life ended. It was remarkable, touching, sad and triumphant.

This book came along just when I needed it.
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Giles
Jan 31, 2021rated it it was amazing
It is impossible to overstate the cultural and spiritual significance of Ram Dass (formerly psychologist Richard Alpert) and his work. As a pioneer of the 1960s counterculture, both as a psychologist and as spiritual explorer, he has had a powerful impact, even if some of it has been under the radar.
You may not want to embrace the Hindu cultural and spiritual trappings that provided a context for his work. Nevertheless, there is a lucidity and a joyful sense of wonder about the heart of his life and teachings. In fact Ram Dass, along with Gandhi would say that his life was his teaching. I have heard many of the stories in this book before (though not all of them), but that didn't matter at all. The autobiographical perspective, looking back from the end of his life, and told to one of his closest friends Rameshwar Das, gives them a fresh feel and manages to uncover new layers of spiritual significance in each one.
Reading this book, was a happy experience. Despite the fact that Ram Dass left his body a little over a year ago I could feel a tangible sense of the presence of this loving and joyful soul.
I am sure I will read it again on many occasions.
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Jeremy Hartley
Feb 25, 2021rated it it was amazing
This book was both fascinating and inspirational from beginning to end. It was a journey of almost 90 years. Of Richard Alpert starting life as a young boy, becoming a grown man, experimenting with LSD, meeting his guru, Maharajji (Neem Karoli Baba), becoming Ram Dass and finally the long journey to just becoming a soul.

There were so many interesting characters that pass by along the way. So many of whom have had a role in shaping my life. Living, dying, psychedelics, faith, devotion are just some of the topics that came by.

The story is lovingly told by Rameshwar Dass who wrote this book with him. I strongly recommend the audio book, which is read by Rameshwar Dass.

This is the strongest recommendation I could give for a book. Would give more stars if I could.
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Eric Hannemann
Nov 22, 2020rated it liked it
Excellent memoir of one of the greatest teachers of our times. If you have been interested in the history and background of Ram Dass, this book will you give you more and then some! Highly recommended for those who have listened or read through his teachings.
Eli Gray
Nov 03, 2020rated it it was ok
A bit too long winded
Amy
Feb 01, 2021rated it it was amazing
Ram Ram Ram.
Pieter Aart
Apr 19, 2021rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
A full of love account of Ram Dass's life before, during and after Richard Alpert. A detailed look into the rise of psychedelics in the 70's, including appearances on the scene by Timothy Leary, Aldus Huxley, Alan Watts and the likes. It must have felt like being at the frontier of their kind of exploration before stepping into the exploration of his own path, the frontier we all share, that makes us common yet vastly unique. For me this book was a very warm read, written in a light way, conveying the warmth of Ram Dass's path. Maybe a bit slow at the end, but worth reading. Ram. Ram. Ram. Ram. Ram. Ram. Ram.

Ram. 
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John Hein
Dec 02, 2021rated it it was amazing
I didn't plan to read "Being Ram Dass." Having previously read three of his books and Parvati Markus's "Love Everyone," I figured I knew enough about Ram Dass; however, the Love Serve Remember Foundation put on an online discussion group about the book so I joined in the fun. I'm so glad I read "Being Ram Dass." It provided some extraordinary detail and anecdotes that I hadn't read or heard before. Rameshwar Das, who was with Ram Dass in India and a long time friend, coauthored this wonderfully written book with Ram Dass over many years, and certainly seems to have been the driving force behind it. I definitely recommend the book. (less)
Isaiah
Mar 25, 2021rated it really liked it
I always love the stories of yogis abs how they found their way. It was an enjoyable book and a form of motivation for me to keep working on my spiritual side
Jeff Bauer
Mar 28, 2021rated it it was amazing
I was really pleased with how this memoir "filled in the gaps" on a lot of Ram Dass' story. He speaks frankly about his missteps and about his sexuality. This book inspired me to go back and read several of his other books. Highly recommended, even for those who are familiar with his life story (less)
David
Sep 25, 2021rated it it was ok
worth picking up, but only for maybe an hour or two total. I knew a fair amount already about his time at Harvard researching psychedelics with Timothy Leary. Learned some about his painful struggles with coming out as gay (first to himself, then the world). Some of the career/family-of-origin stuff was vivid and paints a picture of a much different time in the 1960's above and beyond the differences for which the decade became known -- ex. the casual "my advisor called so-and-so to see if they had a job for a bright......and that's how i got my faculty job at....." way in which occupational advances often happened.

good, vivid depictions of some of his major life events -- learning in late life that he had a son and grandchild he hadn't known about (from brief grad school relationship), coping with aftermath of a stroke he had in the late 90's, and late life in Hawaii ("Maui does not get old" -- I can imagine).

wrapped around, over, under, and thru these interesting (to me) parts of the story are tedious (again, to me) sections involving either (a) blow-by-blow of who took what drugs at what party or research "session" and how they reacted or, later, (b) his ethereal beyond-enthusiastic gushing about his guru. A sample (p. 373):

"I let my mind dissolve into the ocean of love in my spiritual heart. As the mind quiets, the spiritual heart is the gateway to the soul, the place where we are one without distinction. I associate that place with Maharaj-ji's being. He exists on the threshold of self and no-self, of the individual soul and God. As we come together in the spiritual heart, there's just pure being, no experiencer, no subject-object. Just the vast oneness."

beautiful image, reminded me of the teachings one hears in transcendental meditation courses. However, do you want to take in roughly 4,000 passages in that vein? If so, then read every line of this book. Otherwise, i suggest brisk skimming.

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Steve
Mar 12, 2021rated it it was ok
Sorry, Ram Das. I admire you, and believe you did much good for the world. May your spirit be for a blessing. But I couldn't finish the book. The Harvard/Leary years have been covered in greater detail elsewhere, and the guru stuff is not for me. Great pictures, though. (less)
Ben
Apr 16, 2022rated it liked it
I started following the teachings of Ram Das about three years ago after Remember, Be Here Now placed me on the path of god and service. I've listened to many of Ram Dass's talks; I've read a few of his other books too, but I didn't know what to think about his biography. From the onset, I knew it was a story he didn't have too much interest in telling. The Life of Ram Dass is much richer and profound in his talks and other books. This biography is squarely focused on him, yet he feels removed from it. You will understand why after reading the last two posthumous chapters, which express the intent in the book's writing. This story seems written for those struggling to gracefully let Ram Dass leave his body. I imagine he wrote it for their sake.

Does this book have value? is it worth reading?
It does and it is. If you've augmented your life with Ram Dass's teachings, you wont find a lot of new exciting information. Some details will fill in the gaps for the curious. It offers a whole picture of a counter-culture formed and unformed. It's a great reference material for finding other references. Every chapter of the book points to an endless river of names and history to learn more about.

The other significant takeaway of Being Ram Das is how he puts words to an intellectual understanding of the Guru-Devotee relationship. This is an aspect that can help you find a perspective of "what" a guru is, if his other works hadn't already taken you there. For those who need it, it can be a great last nugget of wisdom.

Read this story as a celebration of his carnation, but don't close the back cover and say it's the end of Ram Dass. There will be a teaching hidden somewhere, ready for you when you are ripe. You might be reminded of something or be pointed to another clue for you to seek in your own journey. Enjoy it for what it is; a summarized history lesson told for the heart.

I once read that a seeker of liberation would do well to read the works of great saints and devoted seekers. This book definitely fits into that cannon.
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Phanindra
Dec 22, 2021rated it it was amazing
When I picked up the book “Being Ram Dass”, I was not expecting much. I knew Ram Dass as a disciple of Neem Karoli Baba (Maharaj Ji). His book “Miracle of Love” containing stories of his Guru made me appreciate the grace of Maharaj Ji but did not make me a fan of Ram Dass. I heard couple of Ram Dass’s spiritual lectures and liked his teaching style. I knew his past story from being a Harvard Professor to his experiments on psychedelics. I was amazed by his transformation after meeting Maharaj Ji but I never felt any particular pull towards him.

Then I read this book and I am touched and impressed! Ram Dass died 2 years ago on this same day (Dec 22nd) I finished reading the book. I felt a deep connection with him as I read about his last moments. He gracefully finished this leg of his spiritual journey and walked into the embrace of Maharaj Ji. Through out the book, we can feel his love for Maharaj Ji and this love touches us too. This is indeed the core of Maharaj Ji’s teaching - Love Everyone. What a beautiful way to express this love through his life!

We can easily connect with Ram Dass because he is not perfect. He is not a great ascetic Yogi. He is an ordinary person with spiritual leanings who also has material desires and egoistic tendencies. Maharaj Ji embraced him and his imperfections with unconditional love and that began his transformation. It was never fully complete but he kept making a life-long progress from his ego-centre to his spiritual heart. He explains this journey in a very honest way that really resonated with me.

This book is an inspiration for every spiritual aspirant. It is a message of love and determination. It shows that we too can make changes in ourselves and we too can make a difference in the world. Through Ram Dass, we too can connect with Maharaj Ji whose another name is Love.
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Sertac
Jan 28, 2021rated it it was amazing
Mixed feelings... After reading about his Richard Alpert years, then 'Be Here Now' and watching 'Ram Dass, Going Home' twice, I decided to read 'Miracle of Love' about Maharaj-ji. I really wanted to understand how a man of science can change so dramatically and fall into bhakti. Who am I to criticise; I just wanted to understand.
I've looked for clues about this transition in 'Being Ram Dass'. I couldn't find many answers. Especially after reading 'Miracle of Love', I'm still struggling with Maharaj-ji being such much associated with unconditional love. Additionally, all those supernatural things they say he has done are accepted without much (scientific) questioning. I understand and respect that people need to believe in anything/something/someone that can transform and make them enlightened and loved/happier human beings in many ways. Still, I am having difficulty comprehending and getting into Ram Dass' and Maharaj-Ji and all the 'hype' created around. I've heard this saying: ''Guru doesn't fly; the devotees make him fly'. I sincerely tried to find clues to prove this wrong but no luck. I'd appreciate if anyone could shed light and help me understand what that extraordinary and still 'real' about Maharaj-Ji was.

I have to say; I got bored of reading glorification of him all over the book which I was expecting more about love and compassion and how Ram Dass understand life and death overall, which I found in Part V finally.

No matter what this is a great human being's astonishing life story which is a 5-star read.
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Livre_monde
Dec 28, 2020rated it it was amazing
This book came my way when I was going through one of the lowest emotional moments in my life and needed spiritual uplifting to sail through. It seemed like a message from God himself. This book is also my first ever ARC from @netgalley when I was absentmindedly scrolling through my dashboard and I came through the powerful cover of this book. There was an instant pull.

Born in 1931 as Richard Alpert, Ram Dass was given his spiritual name by his Guru Neem Karoli Baba who has established several ashrams and temples devoted to Hanuman (Hindu monkey God) in the Himalayas. Born in a privileged family, Richard was a psychology professor at Harvard. He along with Timothy Leary pioneered psychedelic drugs research during the '50s-'60s which had raised lots of controversies. This book is Richard's transformational journey from a Harvard professor to the psychedelic researcher to
Becoming Ram Dass, one of the most influential spiritual leaders in the west.

This book is the first-person narration of a life that has been written with an open heart. Covering 88years of a lifetime which has been a witness and participant to many revolutionary events, Ram Dass's life is a message to every soul who is seeking spirituality.

This book is releasing on Jan'21 and recommended if:
- You are looking for a spiritual read
- Don't mind reading lengthy books
- You are interested in knowing about psychedelic related research.
- You like detailed autobiographies
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Lit Folio
Apr 30, 2021rated it it was amazing
This is a vastly well written autobiography of one of the men who launched an entire movement of bringing LSD culture and then Hindu spirituality to the west. The Beatles were also partly responsible for this trend circa 1967 when they apprenticed under a guru and featured (mostly via George Harrison) the Indian sitar sound in their later work. What did this all do to contemporary North American culture? Perhaps we see the seeds of this movement now in full bloom where so many states have legalized Marijuana and LSD is currently being proscribed as an excellent medical alternative to standard drug treatments for a variety of ills.

It's a compellingly good read of Richard Alpert's life from Harvard prof to humble Hindu practitioner. I had no idea this man was so philanthropic in his work all the way to his demise in Maui some two years ago at the age of 88. Ram Dass also points out his struggle with the temptations of getting on a 'power trip' with his newfound role of speaker, teacher and role model for many. It's an important point that needs to be made in this subsequent age of so many writing books and making huge returns on the New Age movement that he unwittingly started. His sincerity rings true throughout and convinced this reader that the man 'walked his talk'--in spite of frankly admitting his propensity of things lustful, homo-erotic and other such appetites we humans fall into so easily. Wholeheartedly recommend.
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Bob Woodley
Nov 14, 2021rated it really liked it
I've read almost everything Ram Dass has written over the years, starting with "Be Here Now" shortly after it came out. "Be Here Now" was his most amazing work, his magnum opus, a breath-takingly creative endeavor, a gigantic force that changed society. He never wrote anything remotely comparable.

He was a teacher and I definitely learned a lot from him, and even went to hear him speak on occasion in NYC. He translated Hinduism and Buddhism to an American audience, and at core that's what his teachings were. He had a personal twist that I don't find elsewhere in Hinduism and Buddhism, namely his focus on the soul. Perhaps that is his Jewish upbringing coming through. His teachings didn't really evolve much, and his books seemed similar and even repetitious after a while.

This autobiography was published posthumously. Much of it I already knew. The early years as a psychedelic pioneer were new to me, and those stories are quite entertaining. This bits where we strays from biography to teaching are weaker, but perhaps that because I already had heard his teachings so many times.

I have great respect for Ram Dass. He was very honest about his flaws and is a great story-teller. If there is anyone who deserves a biography it is him. This is the real history of the hippie movement, from LSD to mysticism to old age. He lived it and led the way.

If you don't know anything about Ram Dass, this would be a good book to read. But "Be Here Now" is the real gem.

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Autobiography of a Spiritually Incorrect Mystic by Osho | Goodreads

Autobiography of a Spiritually Incorrect Mystic by Osho | Goodreads






Autobiography of a Spiritually Incorrect Mystic

by
Osho
4.29 · Rating details · 1,147 ratings · 86 reviews
An indispensable work for understanding the life and teachings of one of the most unusual mystics and philosophers of our time.

Ten years have past since, in the words of his attending physician, Osho prepared for his departure from the body that had served him for fifty-nine years "as calmly as though he were packing for a weekend in the country." This volume is recognition that the time has come to provide a historical and biographical context for understanding Osho and his work. Who was this man, known as the Sex Guru, the "self-appointed bhagwan" (Rajneesh), the Rolls-Royce Guru, the Rich Man's Guru, and simply the Master?

Drawn from nearly five thousand hours of Osho's recorded talks, this is the story of his youth and education, his life as a professor of philosophy and years of travel teaching the importance of meditation, and the true legacy he sought to leave behind: a religionless religion centered on individual awareness and responsibility and the teaching of "Zorba the Buddha," a celebration of the whole human being. (less)

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Paperback, 336 pages

Sep 18, 2007Melanie rated it liked it
Recommends it for: people looking for a guru
Well, I had heard a bit about Osho as I am in the whole New Age thing, but I have to say, this guy is so full of himself, it's hard to see past it.
Osho was the guru who built a huge ashram in Oregon in the late 80s and was arrested for dipping his hands in the cookie jar more than once. He was known to live a lavish lifestyle and make no apologies about it. The book is his story, and the whole time, he just keeps reminding readers about how great he is.
To be fair, some of the things he has to say are important: "You are being taught from the very childhood not to be yourself, but the way it is said is very clever, cunning. They say, 'You have to become like Krishna, like Buddha,' and they pain Buddha and Krishna in such a way that a great desire arises in you to be a Buddha, to be a Jesus, to be a Krishna. This desire is the root cause of your misery...Try to understand the point. If it is against your will, even in paradise you will be in hell. But following your natural course of being, even in hell you will be in paradise. Paradise is where your real being flowers. Hell is where you are crushed and something else is imposed on you"

Here here!
So a mixed bag. Good for reading in small doses while in the potty.
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May 23, 2013Claudius Odermatt rated it it was amazing
Recommends it for: Those Seeking Truth, spiritual and religious individuals or those wanting a good laugh
I personally have immensely enjoyed this book, packed with great insight on life and 'god' were at times you may question yourself but then a couple pages later you burst into sheer laughter at the madness (especially when he goes on talking about his 93 RR's). Osho has strived for his whole life to get the 'truth' out to those who truly seek in such a way that he will help you realize the golden gems hidden within you as he understands humanity.

Having Osho share with us his experience you will get a glimpse into his life's story (Amusing and interesting, especially during his University years) and allows you to develop a better understand of his teachings and his very nature through his own words, not the medias or what you have heard online.
His overall vision was to have one religion for the world, science. Now the very definition of science is 'knowing' however the world only focuses one end of science, the external and not its polar opposite, internal. The science of looking within. Both are needed. Along with LOVE. <3
Alll in all i would much rather not say too much about this book as it will take away its authenticity with my words, read it for yourself, one i would consider re-reading.
Thankful to have stumbled upon Osho and his books, especially this one.
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Oct 23, 2012Kavya rated it really liked it
This is one autobiography one wants to read if she wants to know more about the person himself than the trivias surrounding his life. This book doesn't have any great details all the people who came in his life (for those who see a mention, sometimes even the basic like his/her name is skipped) to my utter relief !!. In order to build enough context, most of the biographies go in depth talking about the inane details starting form the person's schooling to what not. But this book doesn't has any of it. The context is set by speaking in the language of spirituality;

This book revolves around the life of a man. This book is a small effort in presenting the man himself as it raises more doubts in my mind about him than it clears. His journey pre,during and post enlightenment , re-affirms certain notions to me; I see a sync in his experience and some others narrators (authors whom I have read in the past) who quote about their journey of spiritual enlightenment.

Osho being osho is still remains a mystic to me. (less)
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May 25, 2012Michael Sinai rated it it was amazing
Autobiographies from enlightened beings make for some of the most interesting and inspirational reading. This one is right up there at the top of the list.
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May 29, 2017Hlyan rated it it was amazing
In this autobiography, Osho gets very personal. His recount of his childhood, his life as a college student and professor are so amusing, funny and also emboldening. Then his life as a spiritual master becomes rather exciting. When he went to America, it feels like I was reading a suspense or a crime novel. I already knew what was going to happen to the commune but I wanted to know his recount of the events, how he perceived them, what he learned and how he responded - and they were really heartening.

You will get not only glimpses of this spiritually incorrect mystic but also a taste of his philosophy, his teachings, and his bold and daring visions. (less)
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Dec 19, 2008Narendra Singh rated it it was amazing
Recommends it for: Anyone who is seeker, or want to know about Osho
Recommended to Narendra by: I just got it in book store
This is a very good book. I like the book very much becasuse it tell much about religion, about osho and about being yourself. The line in this book which is like the most is "Be in the world, but don't be of it. Live in the world, but don't allow the world to live in you" (less)
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Jun 23, 2014Tejvinderbrar added it
Osho is spitually correct and always was he was an enlighyened master. In fact a master of masters. He had expeirnced enlightenment to its hightest level possible by man. he never was and never will be "spitually incorrect" ...more
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Sep 19, 2008Justin rated it did not like it
Shelves: spirituality, nonfiction, personal-faith-journeys-etc
Osho apparently experienced genuinely high spiritual states at one point, but he came under the influence of negative forces later in his life. He is best left alone.
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Feb 02, 2016Swarna Pawar rated it it was amazing
It's a masterpiece about a master who took on the rotten belief systems. He lives on & his teaching will inspire people forever (less)
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Jul 21, 2013Nick rated it really liked it
"consciousness continues. The pilgrimmage of consciousness is endless. So what is happening in the consciousness, inside the body, will go on happening outside the body. That is a simple understanding." (xvii)

"But to me, spirituality has a totally different connotation. It needs an honest individuality. It does not allow any kind of dependence.
It creates a freedom for itself, whatever the cost. It is never in the crowd, but alone, because the crowd has never found any truth.The truth has been found only in people's aloneness." (3)

"Spiritual, to me, simply means finding one's self. I never allowed anybody to do this work on my behalf--because nobody can do this work on your behalf;
you have to do it yourself." (3)

"In the past there were children married before they were ten. Sometimes children were even married when they were still in their mother's womb. Just two friends would
decide: 'Our wives are pregnant, so if one gives birth to a boy and the other gives birth to a girl, then the marriage is promised.' The question of asking the boy and girl does not arise at all; they are not even born yet! But if one is a boy and another is a girl, the marriage is settled. And people kept their word.
My own mother was married when she was seven years old. My father was not more than ten years old, and he had no understanding of what was happening. I used to ask him,
'What was the most significant thing that you enjoyed in your wedding?' He said, 'Riding on the horse.' Naturally! For the first time he was dressed like a king, with a knife hanging by his side, and he was sitting on the horse and everybody was walking around him. He enjoyed it tremendously. That was the thing he enjoyed most about his wedding. A honeymoon was out of the question. Where will you send a ten-year-old boy and a seven-year-old girl for a honeymoon? So in India the honeymoon never used to exist, and in the past, nowhere else in the world either." (5)

"Silence has its vibe; it is infectious." (7)

"The moment you see someone dependent on you in any way, you start indoctrinating." (10)

"in fact, if you believe in any religion, you cannot meditate. Religion is an interference with your meditation. Meditation needs no God, no heaven, no hell, no fear of punishment, and no allurement of pleasure. Meditation has nothing to do with the mind; meditation is beyond it, whereas religion is only mind, it is within mind." (10)

"as far as religion is concerned, everybody is lying. Christians, Jews, Jainas, Mohammedans--everybody is lying. They all talk of God, heaven and hell, angels and all kinds of nonsense,
without knowing anything at all." (13)

"Nobody should lie--to a child, at least, it is unforgiveable. Children have been exploited for centuries just because they are willing to trust. You can lie to them very easily, and they will trust you. If you are a father, a mother, they will think you are bound to be true. That's how the whole of humanity lives in corruption, in a very slippery, thick mud of lies told to children for centuries. If we can do just one thing, a simple thing--not lie to children and to confess to them our ignorance--then we will be religious and we will put them on the path of religion." (13)

"It is a scientific fact that people who eat less live longer." (14)
http://www.pbs.org/safarchive/4_class...
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles...
http://www.askmen.com/sports/news/21_...

"Unless one is a born troublemaker one cannot become a buddha."(18)

"It is never too late to change. If you see what you have chosen is not right, change it. In fact, be quick, because you are getting old. Don't say 'I am old, so I cannot change.' A young man can affort not to change but not an old man--and you are old enough." (19)

"Stop all this nonsense! Nobody ever changes unless one changes right now. Don't say 'I will, I will.' Either change or don't change, but be clear." (19)

"Unless one is rebellious, one is not religious. Rebellion is the very foundation of religion." (20)

"Separation has its own poetry, one just has to learn its language, and one has to live in its depth. Then out of sadness itself comes a new kind of joy...which looks almost impossible, but it happens." (20)

"Death can only be encountered in the death of a loved one. When love plus death surrounds you, there is a transformation, an immense mutation, as if a new being is born. You are never the same again. But people do not love, and because they do not love they can't experience death the way I experienced it. Without love, death does not give you the keys to existence. With love, it hands over to you the keys to all that is." (25)

"Love with freedom--if you have it, you are a king or a queen. That is the real kingdom of God--love with freedom. Love gives you the roots into the earth, and freedom gives you the wings." (25)

"I want to be an educated vagabond,not a vagabond out of weakness. I don't want to do anything in my life out of weakness--because I could not be anything else, that's why I'm a vagabond--that is not my way. First I want to prove to the world that I can be anything that I want to be,still I choose to be a vagabond-- out of strength. Then there is a respectability even if you are a vagabond, because respectability has nothing to do with your vocation, your profession; respectability has something to do with acting out of strength, clarity, and intelligence." (28)

"I take direct action. I don't believe in unnecessary talk." (31)

"I never missed a single opportunity to sharpen my intelligence. I turned every possible opportunity toward sharpening my intelligence, individuality. You can understand now, looking at the whole picture, but in fragments...The people who came into contact with me of course were unable to understand what kind of man I am--crazy, nuts--but I was going about it very methodically." (32)

"Only once in a while a man becomes a wild human being. I am now; Buddha was, Zarathustra was, Jesus was--" (33)

"Whenever you are in love with flowing things, moving things, you have a different vision of life. Modern man lives with asphalt roads, cement and concrete buildings. These are nouns, remember, these are not verbs. The skyscrapers don't go on growing; the road remains the same whether it is night or day, whether it is a full-moon night or a night absolutely dark. It doesn't matter to the asphalt road, it does not matter to the cement and concrete buildings.

Man has created a world of nouns and he has become encaged in his own world. He has forgotten the world of the trees, the world of the rivers, the world of the mountain and the stars. They don't know of any nouns, they have not heard about nouns; they only know verbs. Everything is a process. God is not a thing but a process." (39)

"Although Jesus says, 'man cannot live by bread alone,' man cannot live without bread either. He needs the bread. It may not be enough, he needs many more things, but many more things come only later on; first comes the bread. Man certainly can live by bread alone. He will not be much of a man -- but who is much of a man? But nobody can live without bread, not even Jesus." (40)

"I was going into the mosque, and they allowed me. Christians, Mohammedans--these are converting religions; they want people from other folds to come into their fold. They were very happy seeing me there--but the same question: 'Would you like to become like Hazrat Muhammad?' I was surprised to know that nobody was interested in my just being myself, helping me to be myself.

Everybody was interested in somebody else, the ideal, their ideal, and I have only to be a carbon copy? God has not given me any original face? I have to live with a borrowed face, with a mask, knowing that I don't have any face at all? Then how can life be a joy? Even your face is not yours.

If you are not yourself, how can you be happy?" (41)

"You are taught from the very childhood not to be yourself, but the way it is said is very clever, cunning. They say, 'You have to become like Krishna, like Buddha,' and they paint Buddha and Krishna in such a way that a great desire arises in you to be a Buddha, to be a Jesus, to be a Krishna. This desire is the root cause of your misery.

I was also told the same things that you have been told, but from my very childhood I made it a point that whatsoever the consequence I was not going to be deviated from myself. Right or wrong I am going to remain myself. Even if I end up in hell I will at least have the satisfaction that I followed my own course of life. If it leads to hell, then it leads to hell. Following others advice
and ideals and disciplines, even if I end up in paradise I will not be happy there, because I have been forced against my will.

Try to understand the point. If it is against your will, even in paradise you will be in hell. But following your natural course of being, even in hell you will be in paradise. Paradise is where your real being flowers. Hell is where you are crushed and something else is imposed upon you." (41)

'it is very difficult for the old traditionalists, the orthodox people, to accept laughter. You cannot laugh in a church." (44)

"It is good to fall a few times, get hurt, stand up again--to go astray a few times. There is no harm. The moment you find you have gone astray, come back. Life has to be learned through trial and error." (46)

"Life is the basis of all worries. When you are going to die anyway one day, why worry?
...If you accept death, there is no fear. If you cling to life, then every fear is there...
If you accept death, a distance is created. Life moves far away with all its worries, irritations, everything. I died, in a way, but I came to know that something deathless is there.
Once you accept death totally, you become aware of it." (57)

"When nobody expects anything from you, you fall into a silence. The world has accepted you; now there is no expectation from you." (61)

"That one year of tremendous pull drew me farther and farther away from people, so much so that I would not recognize my own mother, I might not recognize my own father; there were times I forgot my own name. I tried hard, but there was no way to find what my name used to be. Naturally, to everybody else during that one year I was mad. But to me that madness became meditation, and the peak of that madness opened the door." (63)

"When you first enter the world of no-mind it looks like madness--the "dark night of the soul," the mad night of the soul. All the religions have noted the fact; hence all the religions insist on finding a master before you start entering into the world of no-mind--because he will be there to help you, to support you. You will be falling apart but he will be there to encourage you, to give you hope. He will be there to interpret the new to you. That is the meaning of a master: to interpret that which cannot be interpreted, to indicate that which cannot be said, to show that which is inexpressible. He will be there, he will devise methods and ways for you to continue on the path--otherwise you might start escaping from it. And remember, there is no escape. If you start escaping you will simply go berserk. Sufis call such people the mastas. In India they are known as mad paramhansas. You cannot go back because it is no longer there, and you cannot go ahead because it is all dark. You are stuck. That's why Buddha says 'Fortunate is the man who has found a master.'" (64)

"I was working alone on myself with no friends, no fellow travelers, no commune. To work alone, one is bound to get into many troubles, because there are moments that can only be called dark nights of he soul. So dark and dangerous, it seems as if you have come to the last breath of your life, this is death, nothing else. That experience is a nervous breakdown. Facing death, with nobody to support and encourage you...nobody to say not to be worried, that this will pass away. Or, 'This is only a nightmare, and the morning is very close. The darker the night, the closer is the sunrise. Don't be worried.' Nobody around whom you trust, who trusts you--that was the reason for the nervous breakdown.

But it was not harmful. It looked harmful at the moment, but soon the dark night was gone and the sunrise was there, the breakdown had become the breakthrough. To each individual it will happen differently. And the same is true after enlightenment: the expression of enlightenment will be different." (79)

"That is how all religions are created: individuals imposing their experience on the whole of humanity, without taking into consideration the uniqueness of every individual... They cannot accept other enlightened people for small reasons, because they don't suit their ideas. They have to fit with a certain concept, and that concept is derived from their own founder. And nobody can fit with that, so everybody else is denounced as unenlightened." (81)

"the enlightened man has no answers, no scriptures, no quotations marks. He is simply available; just like the mirror he responds, and he responds with intensity and totality. So these are liquid qualities, not qualifications. Don't look at small things--what he eats, what he wears, where he lives--these are all irrelevant. Just watch for his love, for his compassion, for his trust. Even if you take advantage of his trust, he does not change his trust. Even if you misuse his compassion, cheat his love, that does not make any difference. That is your problem. His trust, his compassion, his love remain just the same. His only effort in life will be how to make people awake. Whatever he does, this is the only purpose behind every act: how to make more and more people awake, because through awakening he has come to know the ultimate bliss of life." (82)

"a man who has never gone in the rains, under the trees, cannot understand poetry." (85)

"Universities destroy most people's interest and love for poetry. They destroy your whole idea of how a life should be; they make it more and more a commodity. They teach you how to earn more, but they don't teach you how to live deeply, how to live totally--and these are where you can get glimpses. These are where small doors and windows open into the ultimate. You are told the value of money but not the value of a rose flower. You are told the value of being prime minister or a president but not the value of being a poet, a painter, a singer, a dancer. Those things are thought to be for crazy people." (85)

"The way you present your arguments is strange. It is sometimes so weird that I wonder...how did you manage to look at it from this angle? I have been thinking about a few problems myself, but I never looked from that aspect. It strikes me that perhaps you go on dropping any aspect that can occur to the ordinary mind, and you choose only the aspect that is unlikely to occur to anybody.

For four years you have been winning the [interuniversity debating] trophy for the simple reason that the argument is unique and there is nobody ready to answer it. They have not even thought about it, so they are simply in shock. Your opponents--you reduce them so badly, one feels pity for them, but what can we do?" (86)

"you have seen me only in the debate competitions. You don't know much about me; I may prove a trouble for you, a nuisance. I would like you to know everything about me before you decide.

Professor S.S. Roy said, 'I don't want to know anything about you. The little bit that I have come to know, just by seeing you, your eyes, your way of saying things, your way of approaching reality, is enough. And don't try to make me frightened about trouble and nuisance--you can do whatsoever you want." (87)

"The first day I joined his class, Professor S.S. Roy was explaining the concept of the Absolute. He was an authority on Bradley and Shankara. Both believe in the Absolute--that is their name for God.
I asked him one thing, which made me very intimate to him and he opened his whole heart to me in every possible way. I just asked, "Is your 'absolute' perfect? Has it come to a full stop
or is it still growing? If it is still growing, then it s not absolute, it is imperfect--only then can it grow. If something more is possible, some more branches, some more flowers--then it is alive.
If it is complete, entirely complete--that's the meaning of the word absolute; now there is no possibility for growth--then it is dead...Is your God alive or dead? You have to answer this question." (87)

"My whole life from the very beginning has been concerned with two things: never to allow any unintelligent thing to be imposed upon me, to fight against all kinds of stupidities, whatsoever the consequences, and to be rational, logical, to the very end. This was one side, which I was using with all those people with whom I was in contact. And the other was absolutely private, my own: to become more and more alert, so that I didn't end up just being an intellectual." (91)

"I was amazed to know that when you discuss something and discover the logical pattern, the whole fabric, you need not remember it. It is your own discovery; it remains with you. You cannot forget it." (94)

"When you trust someone, it is very difficult for him to deceive." (95)

"When I do something, I do it to the very end." (96)

"I have found throughout my life that if you are just a little ready to sacrifice respectability, you can have your way very easily. The society has played a game with you. It has put respectability on too high a pedestal in your mind, and opposite it, all those things that it wants you not to do. So if you do them, you lose respectability.
Once you are ready to say, 'I don't care about respectability,' then the society is absolutely impotent to do anything against your will." (97)

"Don't hesitate! Just move and get mixed. In my class you cannot sit separately. And I don't mind if you try to touch the girl or the girl tries to pull your shirt; whatever is natural is accepted by me. So I don't want you to sit there frozen, shrunken. That is not going to happen in my class. Enjoy being together. I know you have been throwing slips, stones, letters. There is no need. Just sit by her side, give the letter to the girl, or whatever you want to do--because in fact you are all sexually mature; you should do something. And you are just studying philosophy, you are absolutely insane! Is this the time to study philosophy? This is the time to go out and make love. Philosophy is for the old age when you cannot do anything else--you can study philosophy then." (98) (less)
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Dec 09, 2021Theodore rated it it was amazing
This book gives proper context to a widely misunderstood man. His early life, enlightenment, controversies, and death.

Topics include: religion, society, psychology, meditation - in the usual poetic, iconoclastic style you would expect.

A few of his stated goals: to merge Eastern and Western culture, to unite masculine and feminine qualities of individuals and countries, and to synthesize science and religion (the bridge being art).

I highly recommend this book, as it allows the reader to understand his writings with the right perspective.

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Oct 13, 2019Anda rated it really liked it
Shelves: 50book-2019
Silence has its vibe; it is infectious, particularly a child's silence, which is not forced, which is not because you are saying, "I will beat you if you create a nuisance or noise." No, that is not silence. That will not create the joyous vibrations I am talking about, when a child is silent on his own, enjoying for no reason; his happiness is uncaused. That creates great ripples all around. p 7

My grandfather loved me, but he could not help me much. He was loving, but to be of help more is needed - a certain kind of strength. p 9

Nobody should lie - to a child, at least, it is unforgivable. Children have been exploited for centuries just because they are willing to trust. ... That's how the whole of humanity lives in corruption, in a very slippery, thick mud of lies told to children for centuries. If we can do just one thing, a simple thing - not to lie to children and to confess to them our ignorance - then we will be religious and we will put them on the path of religion. Children are only innocence; leave them not your so-called knowledge. But you yourself must first be innocent, unlying, true. p 13

Knowledge makes you cunning. I was not cunning. I simply asked the question any child could have asked if he were not educated. Education is the greatest crime man has committed against poor children. Perhaps the last liberation in the world will be the libration of children. p 17

"It is never too late to change. If you see what you have chosen is not right, change it. In fact, be quick, because you are getting old. Don't say 'I am old, so I cannot change' A young man can afford not to change, but an old man-you are old enough." p 19

Whenever you are in love with flowing things, moving things, you have a different vision of life. Modern man lives with asphalt roads, cement and concrete buildings. These are nouns, remember, these are not verbs. The skyscrapers don't go on growing; the road remains the same whether it is night or day, wether it is a full-moon night or a night absolutely dark. It doesn't matter to the asphalt road, it does not matter to the cement and concrete buildings. / Man has created a world of nouns and he has become entangled in his own world. He has forgotten the world of trees, the world of the rivers, the world of the mountains and the stars. They don't know of any nouns, they have not heard about nouns; they know only verbs. Everything is a process. God is not a thing but a process. p 39

They were very happy seeing me there - but the same question: "would you like to become like Jesus/Hazrat Muhammad?" I was surprised to know that nobody was interested in my just being myself, helping me to be myself. / The whole existence is blissful because the rock is rock, the tree is tree, the river is river, the ocean is ocean. / You are being taught from the very childhood not to be yourself, but the way it is said is very clever, cunning. They say 'You have to become like Krishna, like Buddha,' and they paint Buddha and Krishna in such a way that a great desire arises in you to be a Buddha, to be a Jesus, to be a Krishna. This is the root cause of your misery. // Paradise is where your real being flowers. Hell is where you are crushed and something else is imposed on you. p 41

...our language is created by us. It consists of words like achievement, attainment, goals, improvement, progress, evolution. Our languages are not created by enlightened people; and in fact they cannot create language even if they want to, because enlightenment happens in silence. How can you bring that silence into words? And whatsoever you do, the words are going to destroy something of that silence. p 67

But right now whatsoever you see is not the truth, it is a projected lie. / You are using the real world as a screen and projecting your own ideas on it. p 77

- that was the reason for the nervous breakdown. But it was not harmful. It looked harmful at the moment, but soon the dark night was gone and the sunrise was there, the breakdown has become the breakthrough. // if I were to make a religion, then this would be a basic thing in it: that anybody who becomes enlightened will first have to go through a nervous breakdown, only then he will have a breakthrough. That is now all the religions are created: individuals imposing their experience on the whole of humanity, without taking into consideration the uniqueness of every individual. p 79

But the enlightened man has no answers, no scriptures, no quotation marks. He is simply available; just like a mirror he responds, and he responds with intensity and totality. // even if you take advantage of his trust, that does not change his trust. Even if you misuse his compassion, cheat his love, that does not make any difference. That is your problem. His trust, his compassion, his love remain just the same. p 82

So my whole life from the beginning has been concerned with two things: never to allow any unintelligent thing to be imposed upon me, to fight against all kinds of stupidities, whatsoever the consequences, and to be rational, logical, to the very end. // And the other was absolutely private, my own: to become more and more alert, so that I didn't end up just being an intellectual. p 91

And I was amazed to know that when you discuss something and discover the logical pattern, the whole fabric, you need not remember it. It is your own discovery; it remains with you. You cannot forget it. p 94

I have found throughout my life that if you are just a little ready to sacrifice respectability, you can have your way very easily. The society has played a game with you. It has put respectability on too high a pedestal in your mind, and opposite it, all those things that it wants you not to do. So if you don't do them, you lose respectability. Once you are ready to say, "I don't care about respectability," then the society is absolutely impotent to do anything against your will. p 97

Teachers are born as poets, it is a great art. Everybody cannot be a teacher, but because of universal education, millions of teachers are required. / Just think of a society that thinks everybody has to be taught poetry and poetry has to be taught by poets. Then millions of poets will be required. Of course, then there will be poets' training colleges. Those poets will be bogus, and then they will ask. "applaud us! Because we are poets. Why are you not respecting us?" This has happened with teachers. / In the past there were very few teachers. People used to travel thousands of miles to find a teacher, to be with him. There was tremendous respect, but the respect depended on the quality of the teacher. It was not demanded from the disciple of from the student or the pupil. It simple happened. p 101

Gautam Buddha, Lao Tzu in China, Socrates in Athens - they were all contemporaries but they had no idea of each other. p 102

The synthesis has to include all the artists and their insights-all the musicians, all the poets, all the dancers, their insights. All the creative people who have contributed to life, who have made humanity richer, have to be taken into account. Nobody has ever thought of the artistic people, that their contribution is also religious. // In my vision it is a triangle-science, religion, art. And they are such different dimensions-they speak different languages / unless you have a deep insight in which they can all melt and become one. p 103

The awakened man understands humanity so deeply. By understanding himself he has understood the miserable state of all human beings. // He does not return evil for evil, for the simple reason that he does not feel offended in the first place. Second he feels sorry for now, he does not feel antagonistic toward you. p 105

I would have loved not to be associated in any way with the word religion // and this is not about any one single religion, it is the same story repeated by all the religions of the world: man exploiting man in the name of God. // in my communing with people, those words-atheist, irreligious, amoral-functioned like impenetrable walls. The moment people heard that I was [] they were completely closed. p 106

"I have risked everything; I was rich, I renounced that to become a Jaina monk. Now I have renounced Jainism, the monkhood, just to be a nobody so that I can have total freedom to experiment." p 116

I simply became tired of the whole thing, because each day I would have to start from ABC. It was always ABC ABC ABC and it became absolutely clear that I would never be able to reach XYZ. p 116

[enlightened man sculpting sand sculptures p 118] These people will remain unrecognised. A dancer may be a buddha, a singer may be a buddha, but these people will not be recognised for the simple reason that their way of doing things cannot become a teaching. p 119

The question arises almost for everyone, that the way I talk is a little strange. No speaker in the world talks like me-technically it is wrong, it takes almost double the time // My speaking is really one of my devices for meditation; I do not speak to give you a message but to stop your mind functioning. // I am using words to create silent gaps. The words are not so important soI can say anything contradictory, anything absurd, anything unrelated, because my purpose is just to create silent gaps. The words are secondary; the silences between those words are primary. This is simply a device to give you a glimpse of meditation. And once you know that it is possible for you, you have traveled far in the direction of your own being. p 120

I cannot force you to be silent, but I can create a device in which spontaneously you are bound to be silent. I am speaking and in the middle of a sentence, when you were expecting another word to follow, nothing follows but a silent gap. And your mind was looking to listen, and waiting for something to follow, and does not want to miss it-naturally it becomes silent. p 121

You may be a sinner, you may be a saint-it does not matter. If the sinner can become silent, he will attain the same consciousness as the saint. p 121

The more you become confident, the more you will be able. without my speaking you will start finding devices yourself. For example, you can go on listening to the birds-they suddenly stop, and they suddenly start. Listen ... there is not reason why this crow should make noises and then stop. It is just giving you a chance. You can find these opportunities, once you know... p123

Pay more attention to it, to why you become silent. Don't make me wholly responsible for your silence, because that will create a difficulty for you. Alone, what are you going to do? Then it becomes a kind of addiction, and I don't want you to be addicted to me. I don't want to be a drug to you. p 125

I have been telling you it is possible to go 'from sex to superconsciousness' and you have been very happy-you hear only 'from sex' you don't hear 'to superconsciousness.' // sex is only a beginning-not the end. And nothing is wrong if you take it as a beginning. If you start clinging to it, then things start going wrong. p 131

And I am not afraid of brainwashing because I am not putting cockroaches in your mind. I am giving you an opportunity to experience a clean mind, and once you know a clean mind you will never allow anybody to throw rubbish and crap into your mind. // Dirtying other people's minds is a crime, but all over the world all the religions, all the political leaders, are using your mind as if it is a toilet. // I am a brainwasher. / And those who come to me should come with clear conception that they are going to a man who is bound to brainwash, to clean minds of all kinds of cockroaches. Hindu, Mohammedan, Christian-they are all against me for the simple reason that they go on putting their cockroaches, and I go on washing people's minds. / It is an up-to-date religious laundry. p 134

I am not saying, 'just follow me, I am the saviour. I will save you' All that is crap. Nobody can save you, except yourself. // The real and authentic independence is that you are not dependent on anybody for your inner growth. // This is a company, not of a master and disciples, this is a company of a master and potential masters. p 135

And by and by you will see-the master is coming. And it is not coming from the outside, it is coming from your inner most core, it is arising from your depths. I looked in, and found him there. My message is simple-that I have found the god within me. My whole effort is to persuade you to look within. The only question is of becoming a watcher on the hills. Become a witness-alert, observing-and you will be fulfilled.

You are here because you are frustrated with your money. You are here because you are frustrated with your success. You are here because you are frustrated with your life. A beggar cannot come because he is not yet frustrated. / Religion is a luxury-the ultimate luxury I call it, because it is the highest value. When a man is hungry, he does not bother about music-he cannot. And if you start playing the sitar before him, he will kill you! He will say 'You are insulting me! I am hungry and you are playing a sitar-is this the time to play the sitar? Feed me first! [] I am dying!' When a man is dying of hunger, what use is a can Gogh painting or a Buddha sermon or beautiful Upanishads or music? Meaningless, he needs bread. // When a man is happy with his body, has enough to eat, has a good house to live in, he starts becoming interested in music, poetry, literature, painting, art. Now a new hunger arises. The bodily needs are fulfilled, now psychological needs arise. There is a hierarchy in needs [...] // A Kabir becomes religious. He was not a millionaire, but he was tremendously intelligent. Buddha became religious because he was tremendously rich. Krishna and Ram and Mahavir became religious because they were tremendously rich. Dadu, Raidas, Farid-they became religious because they were tremendously intelligent. But a certain sort of richness is needed. p 147/148

Not a single exception! That's why I say meditation is a scientific thing. That's how science works: If you can find something without exception, then it becomes a rule. Meditation is a scientific method because in the whole of history nobody has said that it does not lead you to the ultimate blissfulness. p 154

A spiritual mind makes no distinctions between matter and spirit; it is undivided. The whole existence is one-that is the spiritual mind. The materialist, even if he loves a woman, reduces her to a thing. Then who is a spiritualist? A spiritualist is a person who, even if he touches a thing, transforms it into a person. p 156 . (less)
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Sep 25, 2016Tom Stevens rated it it was amazing
If you've read any of Osho's talks and want to know more about Osho, this book will give you some insight into Osho.

Or maybe not.

Osho was an enigma, and he liked it that way. He said things like "The answer you are seeking is that there is no answer." He told some great stories, including plenty of funny jokes, and he may have been a wonderful distraction for those who needed a coping mechanism, a way to distance themselves from the suffering of this existence. But Osho was a stirrer. He loved to stir things up. His clear headedness (according to him) was nothing short of brilliant in the most difficult of situations, which he managed to sometimes even turn into situational comedies.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book and just the fact that these stories purport to be true make them feel real and exciting, though it may be impossible to prove or disprove them.

Spoiler:
The end of the book points very strongly to a catholic/US government conspiracy to poison him. But the book is edited and published by Osho's adherents. Some internet articles about Osho's chief of staff give me the impression that his chief of staff stands out as a likely suspect. Not only did she have a penchant for poisoning people, it was known that she had her chemist/poisoner prepare an untraceable poison for Osho in case he wanted to end it all with minimal suffering. Any indication of Osho willingly taking poison has to my knowledge never surfaced.
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Oct 28, 2009Eden rated it it was amazing
Osho's life story. It puts his teachings in context.
Osho has become a real teacher for me in the last year. From his words, I am learning to be alive in each moment, as "the future" is illusory and unknown and "the past" has already come and gone. He emphasized the equal importance of silence and celebration in the balanced, whole person. That is a balance I find incredibly difficult to strike, but am continuing to understand as a truly healthy way of being. Further, I am working to balance the growth of my intellectual understanding of life with my direct experience of life - as both knowing and knowledge each have their place. (less)
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Sep 26, 2011Michael Graber rated it it was amazing
This autobiography was weaved together from many talks given by OSHO over a long period of time. The 30+ year span enabled something too rare in Autobiography, which is the summary of life from one temporal vantage point. Osho was such a talented speaker, critical thinker, and had such a sharp wit that this book ranks highest among the many autobiographies I have read (others that rate as high are Mark Twain and Steve Martin's Born Standing Up). More important, OSHO's insistence on meditation as a path to integrate cultures, science and religion, and fuse the arts led to a universal vision that might, if we try and practice it, save humanity from itself. (less)
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Jul 07, 2008J-russ rated it liked it
What a life!
Although, I did find parts of it to be a bit egocentric for a man that claimed to be "empty" and "no one". It may be my own projections (as I think he would claim) but there were parts that seemed to belittle the average man and my other readings on him that were not by him pointed to some worrisome events in his journey. But, overall, it was a good read in which I admired the bravery the young Osho displayed and found that much more appealing that the older more arrogant and less engaged man. (less)
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Oct 05, 2012Yogesh Raut rated it really liked it
He was very wonderful man. Real Vagabond. The man who can forgo the ancestral property to become "Sanyasin" which is quite impossible for common man. He challenged all rotten traditions to set free human consciousness. He himself was banned in 21 countries due to pressure raised by America.

The book is wonderful as a man himself. I feel those who love Osho's reading must go for this book to understand his upbringing as a Sanyasin. (less)
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Sep 04, 2015Pritam Poddar rated it it was ok
It is an enjoyable read. Towards the end, I felt it felt he was kind of dictating the truth. It was something like, "it is the way I say it is, it CANNOT be anything else", which some people may not like.

He did experience high spiritual states, no doubt about that, but some of his statements like meditation came from sex, etc. cannot be vouchsafed. That can be a hypothesis or even a theory, but he meant it like a law without adequate explanation. (less)
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Feb 05, 2013Krishnanand Khambadkone added it
A posthumously recreated Autobiography of Bhagwan Rajneesh.

If I start writing about all the good things in this book, that will result in another book so suffice to say that you should at this moment go to your nearest, library, bookstore, goodwill, thrift shop, friend's house, amazon, ebay, half.com, bug your relatives, godfather, godmother and somehow get a hold of this book and read it. (less)
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Apr 10, 2013Cheral rated it it was amazing
Very interesting. He certainly followed his own path from an early age. As a parent, I found some of his childhood stories amazing in regards to his total freedom and how that worked for him. The exact opposite of how we currently think children should be watched, managed and protected. Certainly had to examine many of my beliefs.
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May 22, 2012Rushi rated it really liked it
A good read. Osho's literature is always a pleasure and calming experience. In this book one get to know more about Osho's life, especially early days."Find and Be yourself" is the message in the book. (less)
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May 24, 2012Rachelle Peterson rated it really liked it
OSHO is very true to Himself, and he has no hiccups about it.
He make you ask yourself many questions about...the way you see yourself, and do you love what ypou see? I love me now I need to get rid of the fear with in me.
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Sep 12, 2008Vel rated it it was amazing
i liked this man very much than any other
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Sep 14, 2008Micmoc rated it liked it
A real revolutionary of the spirit of the 20th century
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Oct 04, 2009Swati added it
i can empathise with him somehow...he was a dangerous genious
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Jun 18, 2011Chimedee M rated it it was amazing
Ya-hoo my California, Um coming.
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Sep 25, 2013Aziz rated it it was amazing
Wow.
Simply amazing. This guy had a truly fill life. An interesting read if you adore Osho and his work.
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Apr 23, 2014Nishant Agrawal rated it really liked it
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Oct 01, 2015Calabaza Yañez rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: leido
QUE GRAN LIBRO!!!. LO AMÉ
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May 23, 2016Edwin Wolbers rated it it was ok
Shelves: osho
If you believe these stories are really his childhood, than you're an idiot. There still good stories though. Like most stories there just parable's. (less)
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