New book by Madame de Salzmann: The Reality of Being

mada85

The Cosmic Force
I just came across this on Amazon UK: The Reality of Being: The Fourth Way of Gurdjieff by Madame de Salzmann. It is published by Random House and will be on sale from 27 July. Here's the blurb:

Random House said:
As the closest pupil of the charismatic spiritual master G. I. Gurdjieff (1866–1949), Jeanne de Salzmann was charged with carrying on his teachings of spiritual transformation. Known as the Fourth Way or "the Work," Gurdjieff’s system was based on teachings of the East that he adapted for modern life in the West. Now, some twenty years after de Salzmann's death, the notebooks that she filled with her insights over a forty-year period (and intended to publish) have been translated and edited by a small group of her family and followers. The result is this long-awaited guide to Gurdjieff's teaching, describing the routes to be traveled and the landmarks encountered along the way. Organized according to themes, the chapters touch on all the important concepts and practices of the Work, including:

• awakening from the sleep of identification with the ordinary level of being
• self-observation and self-remembering
• conscious effort and voluntary suffering
• understanding symbolic concepts like the Enneagram
• the Gurdjieff Movements, bodily exercises that provide training in Presence and the awareness of subtle energies
• the necessity of a "school," meaning the collective practice of the teaching in a group


Madame de Salzmann brings to the Work her own strong, direct language and personal journey in learning to live that knowledge of a higher level of being, which, she insists, "you have to see for yourself" on a level beyond theory and concept. De Salzmann consistently refused to discuss the teaching in terms of ideas, for this Fourth Way is to be experienced, not simply thought or believed.

To learn more about the author, visit her website at Reality of Being

And here is some info from www.realityofbeing.org :

realityofbeing.org said:
A Remarkable New Book
by Jeanne de Salzmann

Based on notebooks kept by G. I. Gurdjieff 's closest follower, this book offers new insight on his spiritual teaching—a way of gnosis or "knowledge of being" passed on from remote antiquity. It is a complete and uniquely authoritative guide to the great teacher's ideas and to his methods for liberating ourselves from the state of waking sleep in which most of us live our lives.

Gurdjieff respected traditional religious practices, which he regarded as falling into three general categories or ways: the Way of the Fakir, related to mastery of the physical body; the Way of the Monk, based on faith and feeling; and the Way of the Yogi, which focuses on development of the mind.

He presented his teaching as a Fourth Way which integrated these three aspects into a single path of self-knowledge. Progress in the Fourth Way comes through conscious effort toward a quality of thinking and feeling that brings a new capacity to see clearly and to love.

“Gurdjieff brought us a knowledge of consciousness, a science that shows what we are and our potential capacity, what needs to be developed. He came to bring a teaching, show a way toward consciousness."
Jeanne de Salzmann

Looks very interesting, to say the least.
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

Looks interesting, thanks! My "to-read" list has now grown. As if it weren't big enough already. :lol:
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

If you go to Amazon's US site, you can click on "search inside this book" and read excerpts.
_http://www.amazon.com/Reality-Being-Fourth-Way-Gurdjieff/dp/1590308158/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1278607653&sr=1-1
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

Endymion, thanks for the heads up ;)


Argonaut said:
Looks interesting, thanks! My "to-read" list has now grown. As if it weren't big enough already. :lol:


I know what you mean. I look at the books I have to read and the ones that I have to re-read and it's a little overwhelming;

I would be curious to hear how you guys manage it. I personally take a long time to get through a book (specially the ones that are ''loaded''); I know that I can't just read it in a day or so, not necessarily because I read slow, witch I do, but because I have to stop every other page and think what is being said and if something does't make sens to me or I don't understand, then I have to stop and research a little to see if i can get anywhere and what usually happens is that I end up starting another book and so on...
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

Nicolas said:
I have already placed my order. :clap:

Nice Nicolas, happy reading when it arrives. Can't wait to hear form you when you finished it :)
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

andi said:
Endymion, thanks for the heads up ;)


Argonaut said:
Looks interesting, thanks! My "to-read" list has now grown. As if it weren't big enough already. :lol:


I know what you mean. I look at the books I have to read and the ones that I have to re-read and it's a little overwhelming;

I would be curious to hear how you guys manage it. I personally take a long time to get through a book (specially the ones that are ''loaded''); I know that I can't just read it in a day or so, not necessarily because I read slow, witch I do, but because I have to stop every other page and think what is being said and if something does't make sens to me or I don't understand, then I have to stop and research a little to see if i can get anywhere and what usually happens is that I end up starting another book and so on...

I generally take a while to read a book, too. And I always have a few books going simultaneously. They're usually on different subjects, so whenever my mind needs time to process one (or just take a break) I switch books for awhile.

Oh, and sometimes I'll get a new book while I'm still in the middle of reading one, and I just start on the new book while putting the other "on hold." I have a bad habit of starting so many books that some get put aside indefinitely - 1/4 of the books on my shelves probably have bookmarks in them!

What I'd really love is to learn speed reading. It's the only way I'll ever catch up with all the books I still want to get through. :lol:
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

I have ordered it too and it's comming on July 29-August 2. It really does sound interesting.
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

Thanks Argonaut

[quote author=Argonaut]
I generally take a while to read a book, too. And I always have a few books going simultaneously. They're usually on different subjects, so whenever my mind needs time to process one (or just take a break) I switch books for awhile.
[/quote]

Yes I do switch a lot too when I get clouded reasoning or if I feel that I had way too much info and I need to seat on it. Many times I think that I am dissociating that way, but maybe in a positive way.


Oh, and sometimes I'll get a new book while I'm still in the middle of reading one, and I just start on the new book while putting the other "on hold." I have a bad habit of starting so many books that some get put aside indefinitely - 1/4 of the books on my shelves probably have bookmarks in them!

Me too! I'd say that 1/4 of my books are done half way. While I don't think it is necessarily a bad thing, there is a limit to how many books you start, because after a while they will have to be restarted to get back in theme.


What I'd really love is to learn speed reading. It's the only way I'll ever catch up with all the books I still want to get through.

Sure, that would be nice but then too many details would be lost. Something akin to learning a physics book in a week and not even taking interest in the exercises proposed in it.
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

I just received a flyer from By the Way Books in Iowa where I get a lot of my fourth way books.

They included a couple of quotes which is making it look interesting already.

"Man remains a mystery to himself. He has a nostalgia for Being, a longing for duration, for permanence, for
absoluteness-a longing to be. Yet everything that constitutes his life is temporary, ephemeral, limited. He
aspires to another order, another life, a world that is beyond him. He senses that he is meant to participate in it."

"He searches for an idea, an inspiration, that could move him in this direction. It arises as a question: 'Who am
I-who am I in this world?' If this question becomes sufficiently alive, it could direct the course of his life. He
cannot answer. He has nothing with which to answer-no knowledge of himself to face this question, no
knowledge of his own. But he feels he must welcome it. He asks himself what he is. This is the first step on the
way. He wants to open his eyes. He wants to wake up, to awaken. "

"I am in front of something I do not know. I am in front of a mystery, the mystery of
my Presence. I must recognize that I cannot know this mystery with my ordinary
means of knowing. But I must understand, at least intellectually, what it would
mean to be present-that is, to be present not only with my head, my sensation or
my feeling, but with all these elements of my Presence together. Maybe then I still
will not be truly present, but at least I will search for a common direction."

"Who is present-who is searching? And whom? The whole problem is here."
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

Johnno said:
I just received a flyer from By the Way Books in Iowa where I get a lot of my fourth way books.

They included a couple of quotes which is making it look interesting already.

Thanks, Johnno. This book is definitely at the top of my to-buy list. :)
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

I got mine in the mail yesterday, and it looks like a nice book. I'm waiting for the Dot Connector to arrive and read that first and show it off. But this does look like an important book.
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

I've ordered a copy too and it should arrive tomorrow. I seem to keep at least 2 books going at once, and sometimes I have to read a book again after I've been through it just to help comprehension.

I've gotten partway through Beezlebub's Tales to His Grandson but that one is a brain burner in a way :) Just finished the Mac Tonnes book and starting The Mood Cure. Seems like I sort of unintentionally keep some balance between the health, spiritual, and real conspiracy stuff. I'm hoping that when I get through Beezlebub's, that I'll have the fortitude to tackle Political Ponerology!
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

Hey guys, speaking of Madame de Salzmann I just found a video which shows the Gurdjieff movements presented by her and didn't find any reference to it in the Forum so I decided to post it, maybe some of you have seen it. It looks genuine, but what I would have done if I were the maker of the video was to give much more detial as to what each movement does, how and why. Anyway, here you can download it, it's in english with japanese subtitles (a friend of mine recognized the language from a snapshot i made):

_http://rapidshare.com/files/92617591/The_Gurdjieff_Movements_are_here_presented_by_Jeanne_de_Salzmann.avi

You can also watch it in parts here:

_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1Ryln0tXwU&feature=PlayList&p=2C8F7DCF8754A78F&index=0
_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxkRwbjw2AI&feature=PlayList&p=2C8F7DCF8754A78F&index=1
_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDebhPLLCpQ&feature=PlayList&p=2C8F7DCF8754A78F&index=2
_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5JcNsDvxZ9E&feature=PlayList&p=2C8F7DCF8754A78F&index=3
_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=csgeqm6a4o4&feature=PlayList&p=2C8F7DCF8754A78F&index=4
_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hsPQsndxWQ8&feature=PlayList&p=2C8F7DCF8754A78F&index=5

Any thoughts?
 
Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann

These are genuine, you can tell the quality of attention by the outward expression of the movements - compare to osho's version of the movement done by people with no idea of internal attention.
 
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