obyvatel said:
Here is a different not-so-lethal in the end incident of Gurdjieff's car smashing against a tree.
[quote author=Gurdjieff and The Women of the Rope]
Friday May 14, 1937
Miss Gordon telephoned that he (Gurdjieff) had telephoned from Cannes that "something was" with his car, and that he was taking the train. This noon, still in pajamas and typing, he sent me word he was downstairs. I threw on topcoat and descended. He was pacing up and down, his arm in a sling. Before explaining, he asked all about each patient to whom I had been giving piqûres in his absence. Then he said he had left his car on a steep Alp, engine off, handbrake only holding, while he went to look at the view. In the car there was a woman and children. Suddenly the car moved forward toward the curve and precipice. With one gigantic bound - "never was my brain so quick" - he leaped on the running board, put his arm inside, and steered the Buick straight off the road downhill to the only tree in sight. The car was smashed to bits, but the occupants were saved. He was thrown into the air, turned over several times and fell on his shoulder. "Almost all was finished; me, my work, all of you".
pg156-157
Before his passing in 1949, Gurdjieff had another serious car accident in 1948. He suffered severe internal injuries in that crash.
From different accounts, Gurdjieff apparently drove quite recklessly. He apparently taught himself driving. Here is Kathryn Hulme, one of the "women of the rope" reminiscing
[quote author=Kathryn Hulme]
He drove like a wild man, cutting in and out of traffic without hand signals or even space to accommodate his car in the lanes he suddenly switched to . . . until he was in them, safe by a hair . . . he always got away first on the green light even (so it seemed) when he was one or two cars behind the starting line . . . the chances he took overtaking buses and trucks were terrifying. I watched with suspended breath each time he swung out around a truck and headed directly into another coming toward him on the narrow two lane road.
[/quote]
Fritz Peters recounted similar accounts where Gurdjieff would drive on the wrong side of the road and would not check for gas or carry enough gas so that the car unexpectedly came to a halt in the middle of the road.
So, even if his accident had a "hyperdimensional" element, Gurdjieff's antics with the car significantly increased the chances of something going wrong on the road.
[/quote]
Thank you for this. I didn't sense that the C's were telling the whole story as the questions weren't specific enough- in the typical fashion of answering what is truly asked (including assumptions- which they play around with sometimes).
Those stories remind me of a friend who drives on the edge a lot of times. Don't get me wrong, I can drive fast too, but I can never push it to the limit. That's why in racing high speed go karts a few years ago, I was never as fast as him, but I was much more consistent. I keep a safe margin which is a weakness but also a strength in the long run. Like in Rally driving or endurance driving, that margin is what adds up.
But he doesn't follow the stoic idea of disaster could happen in any way, just a small dust or oil patch on the road can take that control and turn it into disaster. Gurdjieff had the brakes fail or fade and he had no margin to correct for it.
I'm also reminded of an analogue to mechanical and electrical controls systems. In a loop, you have logical controls based on inputs. If badly designed, the loop can and does go out of the safe parameters without remembering to go back inside. A good programming allows for overshooting and undershooting the target, but adapts to the expectations.
And that's why I love the C's saying that "anticipation restricts". The C's are sort of like the programmers/techs of our reality, lol!