Gurdjieff's demystifiers

As i was searching for sites on Gurdjieff in order to form myself a plan for my project i came over some things that throw a more obscure light on Gurdjieff's ideas. These people seem either misunderstood or disappointed in the teaching and the groups that formed in America ( Alex Horn group mostly) and advertise a policy against sects, spiritual groups or schools that spread Gurdjieffian ideas among followers. What are your opinions on this subject?

_http://www.gurdjieff-con.net/2008/06/
_http://forum.rickross.com/read.php?6,27083,65429
 
I think that even in Gurdjieff's time, his work was very much misunderstood, even by some of his close students. He reached insurmountable barriers, for example, even with Ouspensky who was for a time a highly dedicated (and intelligent) student.

As far as I can see it (based on my own very limited understanding), Gurdjieff was reaching towards the very limits of humanity's current capability and potential, so I guess this problem is pretty inevitable. And my understanding is that this process of inadvertent corruption/degradation of the signal continues to this day, to the point that most (all?) Gurdjieff groups out there suffer from a serious case of 'missing the point'.

It does mean that there is now a whole world of misconceptions out there, and really tackling the material in any proper sense is about the most challenging thing I can imagine. It is full of pitfalls, which can lead to misunderstanding and 'disappointment', and a turning against it. He even describes this process (I think it's in 'In Search of The Miraculous') where certain group members suddenly become 'disillusioned' about the whole thing, and are unable to subsequently understand anything, as their psychological defense mechanisms slam shut, and as he puts it: "their song is sung".
 
Nomad said:
I think that even in Gurdjieff's time, his work was very much misunderstood, even by some of his close students. He reached insurmountable barriers, for example, even with Ouspensky who was for a time a highly dedicated (and intelligent) student.

That's very true.

psychic_spy, there are a couple podcasts on the subject of Gurdjieff and his aims that I found helpful at one time:

In Search of the Miraculous
http://www.sott.net/sott/podcast/sott_podcast_64_20060811.mp3

In Search of the Miraculous Part 2
http://www.sott.net/sott/podcast/sott_podcast_65_20060818.mp3
 
psychic_spy said:
As i was searching for sites on Gurdjieff in order to form myself a plan for my project i came over some things that throw a more obscure light on Gurdjieff's ideas. These people seem either misunderstood or disappointed in the teaching and the groups that formed in America ( Alex Horn group mostly) and advertise a policy against sects, spiritual groups or schools that spread Gurdjieffian ideas among followers. What are your opinions on this subject?

_http://www.gurdjieff-con.net/2008/06/
_http://forum.rickross.com/read.php?6,27083,65429

Hi psychic_spy. Personally, I have little problem with anyone expressing himself on his own turf where no actionable libel exists. We already know Gurdjieff didn't have the "whole banana", so-to-say; however, we do know that contemporary neuro-science and cognitive psychology meshes quite well with what G knew about human nature.

I would also caution you to be wary and critical of anyone or any group that swings to any one extreme: whether anti-Gurdjieff or Gung-Ho Pro Gurdjieff, because both states are indicators of "identification" which is something Gurdjieff elaborated on at length.
 
Bud said:
We already know Gurdjieff didn't have the "whole banana", so-to-say;

I had a slight reaction to this... because I've been obeying Gurdjieff's Fourth Way rules, for a long time with "good results", OSIT. Reading the thread Imitation Groups posted earlier is a real eye-opener.

In the first post there was a line by Laura which sums up what my thinking is like right now:

Laura said:
he is considering the 4th way work as "transmitted by Ouspensky" to be a standard, a yardstick

Good stuff! Thanks for this!

Onwards and upwards.
 
beetlemaniac said:
Bud said:
We already know Gurdjieff didn't have the "whole banana", so-to-say;

I had a slight reaction to this... because I've been obeying Gurdjieff's Fourth Way rules, for a long time with "good results", OSIT.

Gurdjieff may not have had the whole banana - but who does? This network does not claim to have the whole banana either. It is said to be a rule in the 4th Way that one can only see at one's own level - one cannot see at a level higher than oneself. So how much of the banana G had would perhaps only be truly discernible to someone at a similar level of Being as him.

So that statement should not detract anyone sincerely interested in working on the self through study of 4th Way material and networking.

My 2 cents
 
obyvatel said:
beetlemaniac said:
Bud said:
We already know Gurdjieff didn't have the "whole banana", so-to-say;

I had a slight reaction to this... because I've been obeying Gurdjieff's Fourth Way rules, for a long time with "good results", OSIT.

Gurdjieff may not have had the whole banana - but who does? This network does not claim to have the whole banana either. It is said to be a rule in the 4th Way that one can only see at one's own level

So that statement should not detract anyone sincerely interested in working on the self through study of 4th Way material and networking.

My 2 cents

That's true and I agree. In past whenever I got to read Gurdjieff I just didn't get it, yes it was very interesting but I just didn't get it. I ever read a little from Mouravieff cause really, it has good teachings between a lot of things that didn't help me in a practical way as Laura says. What I did read was a book about Ouspensky, the little one about his speeches I think, and a few there and here from Gurdjieff and my first try was with that phrase that says that a man can sacrifice anything except his suffering, so I decided to do that or at least tried to do that. Also my environment changed so I'm less stressed right now than before, and the point is that I can assure that what I do a lot is observe myself, even when I do stupid things I'm with the attention on my inside - so in future I may think about it and try to find an answer about my actual behavior, or just working with it - and I little by little started to get few ideas, vague ideas by the way, and then I remembered some quotes about him, and I was realizing how right he was and is. How practical and helpful his teachings are.

We can't of course take everything as truth, that's being a little naive. Gurdjieff even - I think - said that he mixes truth with lies more or less, so his students needed to hear closely and think about what he was talking, and practice their discerning ability. Gurdjieff can't simply have the whole banana because it's not his work to do that, he had a purpose, teaching the fourth way, that's why there are others researchers doing their part of this universal plan. So you can say that indeed having a network is important, because what Laura does and some other researches do, is working with the research from others even if those researches are not still living, because they kind of network their ideas to find a conclusion, a network that transcends time. When the supposedly researchers don't network with others you get pure schizoid info.

Jesus, you really inspired me hoho.
 
Yes obyvatel and Prometeo, it seems pretty obvious that my state of being shows the need for Work. I'm seeing a little hint of how this forum is really a constantly evolving life-form and body of knowledge.

Lost Christianity by Jacob Needleman really helped me with the whole 'attention on the heart' part of self-observation. I am getting the feeling that the Work or at least a part of it, is like a constant cycle of creation and destruction of the ego through continual awareness/remorse arising from our errors due to emotional thinking. Along with this is the search that is a steady input of knowledge which seems to keep everything alive and interesting. I hope I'm not word salad-ing but it seems really true for me at this point.

Makes want to Work harder and harder, and I am loving it. It's wonderful! :)
 
Gurdjieff was a human being like all of us. He had an aim and sacrificed his life to it. I've done the same along with a number of other people. I know, up-close and personal, how that affects people who do not have an aim or who are pathological, witness this:
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/232704-The-French-Connection-Redux-Cult-Accusations-and-The-Deviant-Mind

(Read the update written this morning after a sleepless night)

So whenever I read anyone trying to take Gurdjieff apart, I remember what people have done to me, how they have looked at me from the outside and misunderstood nearly everything I've ever said and done, how they've taken what I say and do and twisted it to try to squeeze it into their small-minded, pathological perceptions of reality.

This world is FULL to the BRIM with sick, small-minded, lemming type people that attack and destroy the very things and people who would benefit them most. Reminds me of a saying attributed to Jesus:

KJV said:
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, which killest the prophets, and stonest them that are sent unto thee; how often would I have gathered thy children together, as a hen doth gather her brood under her wings, and ye would not!
 
beetlemaniac said:
I am getting the feeling that the Work or at least a part of it, is like a constant cycle of creation and destruction of the ego through continual awareness/remorse arising from our errors due to emotional thinking. Along with this is the search that is a steady input of knowledge which seems to keep everything alive and interesting. I hope I'm not word salad-ing but it seems really true for me at this point.

Makes want to Work harder and harder, and I am loving it. It's wonderful! :)

I have these moments too. Before i came in contact with Gurdjieff's teachings i wasn't very remorcefull at my own misconduct and even if i had moments of awarness still, so to say self-remembering, i couldn't name the process and forget what was happening to me as sooner as possible. Now i don't forget quite easily but still i didn't change much the way as i wanted to change. But my imagination diminished somehow ( i used to lose myself in moments of reverie, inventing dreadfull or rosy scenarios about people and things) and i no longer express anger the way as i used to but i still do. All those modifications in my being ( that i hope will become more permanent in time) make the teachings to have a valid effect, otherwise is just me growing up mechanically :P and speculating result about things i just couldn't grasp.

Gurdjieff having the whole banana would have meant to have at least one student who succeded in the aim of attaining immortality, a unitary, indivisible ''I'' and a perfect mastery of the three centres. All these things after he would have followed G's instructions but it didn't occur as far as i read...

I guess Gurdjieff's mistake was that he tried in practice too sooner what he would have suceeded better in theory, by writing the books and exposing the system before training disciples at his Institute of Harmonious Developpement of Man. Theorizing the system before putting it in practice would have been a more productive avenue for what he wanted to accomplish. It is strange that he had too endure so many obstacles untill he had written it.

Bud said:
I would also caution you to be wary and critical of anyone or any group that swings to any one extreme: whether anti-Gurdjieff or Gung-Ho Pro Gurdjieff, because both states are indicators of "identification" which is something Gurdjieff elaborated on at length.

That's the reason i stick to this forum :), because is somewhere, in between, and i can find interesting perspectives and sane considerations on many topics (though the part with psychopaths and conspirations seems to me a bit exaggerate)

But i have to add that the guys on those sites that are anti-Gurdjieff talk about real groups ( i say real, meaning not on the internet) who lasted for years in San Francisco, Sonoma groups or something, conducted by Alex Horn ( a playright, actor) These groups were apparantly maintaining the gurdjieffian tradition of self-remembering, physical and mental exercises and sacred dances but were constitued by individuals who considered themself an elite and were living an outrageous and frivolous existence, seducing their students into beliving their good will, which was not the case ( if we take into consideration the opinions of the posters on rickross). But i still wonder if those guru's were just pretending, just like Gurdjieff in order to challenge the students and take them out of their ruts..
At any rate, it seemed difficult to train anyone by radical means and many attemps proved to be inefficient.
What i have also read there, is that Gurdjieff was actually a master hypnotist and was using a fake system, the fourth way, in order to induce mass hypnosis without intending to educate people in a spiritual sense. He was interested just in the experiment and in the power of his personal magnestism and was using people as laboratory rats, discarding them if they didn't prove to be receptive enough.
 
Now, i had read again the part in my post where i have said that Gurdjieff didn't theorize his ideas before putting them into practice. I was refering to his own books, not Ouspenski's. The Fourh Way and In search of the Miraculous are Ouspenki's gras on Gurdjieff's ideas. Even if they are properly assimilated i think it would have been better that Gurdjieff had written his own works in the first place..
 
psychic_spy said:
Gurdjieff having the whole banana would have meant to have at least one student who succeded in the aim of attaining immortality, a unitary, indivisible ''I'' and a perfect mastery of the three centres. All these things after he would have followed G's instructions but it didn't occur as far as i read...

What do you understand of aim and immortality? Have you read Obyvatel's words above, that one can only see at one's own level?

psychic_spy said:
I guess Gurdjieff's mistake was that he tried in practice too sooner what he would have suceeded better in theory, by writing the books and exposing the system before training disciples at his Institute of Harmonious Developpement of Man. Theorizing the system before putting it in practice would have been a more productive avenue for what he wanted to accomplish. It is strange that he had too endure so many obstacles untill he had written it.

Theory and practice are intimately connected in a feedback loop evolving over time. One can only see at one's own level.

psychic_spy said:
Now, i had read again the part in my post where i have said that Gurdjieff didn't theorize his ideas before putting them into practice. I was refering to his own books, not Ouspenski's. The Fourh Way and In search of the Miraculous are Ouspenki's gras on Gurdjieff's ideas. Even if they are properly assimilated i think it would have been better that Gurdjieff had written his own works in the first place..

How do you know what would have been better for Mr. Gurdjieff or the Work? Are your authoritative words mechanical reproduction of what you read on rickross?

psychic_spy said:
That's the reason i stick to this forum :), because is somewhere, in between, and i can find interesting perspectives and sane considerations on many topics (though the part with psychopaths and conspirations seems to me a bit exaggerate)

But i have to add that the guys on those sites that are anti-Gurdjieff talk about real groups( i say real, meaning not on the internet) who lasted for years in San Francisco, Sonoma groups or something, conducted by Alex Horn ( a playright, actor) These groups were apparantly maintaining the gurdjieffian tradition of self-remembering, physical and mental exercises and sacred dances but were constitued by individuals who considered themself an elite and were living an outrageous and frivolous existence, seducing their students into beliving their good will, which was not the case ( if we take into consideration the opinions of the posters on rickross). But i still wonder if those guru's were just pretending, just like Gurdjieff in order to challenge the students and take them out of their ruts..
At any rate, it seemed difficult to train anyone by radical means and many attemps proved to be inefficient.
What i have also read there, is that Gurdjieff was actually a master hypnotist and was using a fake system, the fourth way, in order to induce mass hypnosis without intending to educate people in a spiritual sense. He was interested just in the experiment and in the power of his personal magnestism and was using people as laboratory rats, discarding them if they didn't prove to be receptive enough.

You have opinion on opinions. Please review Opinions and Imitation Fourth Way Groups Started by Gurdjieff Rejects.
 
psychic_spy said:
Now, i had read again the part in my post where i have said that Gurdjieff didn't theorize his ideas before putting them into practice. I was refering to his own books, not Ouspenski's. The Fourh Way and In search of the Miraculous are Ouspenki's gras on Gurdjieff's ideas. Even if they are properly assimilated i think it would have been better that Gurdjieff had written his own works in the first place..

Maybe if you spent less time caring about what was or was not done for our benefit, you might spend more time figuring out your self.

Learn about becoming humble. If you understood anything at all with any of these Works, you'd know that by now.

OSIT
 

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