Ram Dass Zitate
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Richard Alpert alias Ram Dass war ein US-amerikanischer Professor für Psychologie an der Harvard-Universität, bevor er sich dem Hinduismus zuwendete und über bewusstseinserweiternde Experimente berichtete.

Nach seinem Psychologiestudium machte er an der Tufts University den Bachelor of Arts, erreichte an der Wesleyan University den Mastergrad und promovierte anschließend an der Stanford-Universität. Gemeinsam mit Ralph Haber unternahm er 1958 die erste empirische Studie zur Prüfungsangst.

Timothy Leary und Alpert wurden 1963 aus Harvard entlassen, nachdem sie im Rahmen des Harvard Psilocybin Project umstrittene Untersuchungen, z. B. zur Wirkung von LSD, durchgeführt hatten. Danach setzten sie ihre Experimente privat in New York fort.

1967 reiste Alpert nach Indien, wo er sich in Meditationspraktiken und Yoga vertiefte. Nachdem er Neem Karoli Baba, einen Hindu-Guru in Uttar Pradesh, getroffen hatte und zu seinem Anhänger geworden war, konvertierte er zum Hinduismus und wurde Ram Dass . Nach seiner Rückkehr in die USA gründete Ram Dass Vereine, die sich der Bewusstseinserweiterung widmeten und spirituelles Wachstum fördern wollten.

1997 erlitt er einen Schlaganfall, der eine Aphasie auslöste, dennoch konnte er weiter als Lehrer arbeiten. 2004 zog er nach einer weiteren schweren Erkrankung nach Maui, Hawaii, wo er bis zu seinem Tod im Jahr 2019 jährliche Retreats mit anderen spirituellen Lehrern veranstaltete. Wikipedia  

✵ 6. April 1931 – 22. Dezember 2019   •   Andere Namen リチャード・アルパート, رام داس
Ram Dass Foto
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Ram Dass Berühmte Zitate

Ram Dass zitat: „Je ruhiger Du wirst, desto mehr kannst Du hören.“

Ram Dass: Zitate auf Englisch

“I knew what it was going to do, what it was going to tell me.”

Ram Dass buch Be Here Now

Be Here Now (1971)
Kontext: I had plenty of LSD, but why take it. I knew what it was going to do, what it was going to tell me. It was going to show me that garden again and then I was going to be cast out and that was it.

“A place where "I" existed independent of social and physical identity.”

Ram Dass buch Be Here Now

Be Here Now (1971)
Kontext: I realized that although everything by which I knew myself, even my body and this life itself, was gone, still I was fully aware! Not only that, but this aware "I" was watching the entire drama, including the panic, with calm compassion.
Instantly, with this recognition, I felt a new kind of calmness — one of a profundity never experienced before. I had just found that "I", that scanning device — that point — that essence — that place beyond. A place where "I" existed independent of social and physical identity. That which was I was beyond Life and Death. And something else — that "I" Knew — it really Knew. It was wise, rather than just knowledgeable. It was a voice inside that spoke truth. I recognized it, was one with it, and felt as if my entire life of looking to the outside world for reassurance — David Reisman's other-directed being, was over.

“I realized that although everything by which I knew myself, even my body and this life itself, was gone, still I was fully aware!”

Ram Dass buch Be Here Now

Be Here Now (1971)
Kontext: I realized that although everything by which I knew myself, even my body and this life itself, was gone, still I was fully aware! Not only that, but this aware "I" was watching the entire drama, including the panic, with calm compassion.
Instantly, with this recognition, I felt a new kind of calmness — one of a profundity never experienced before. I had just found that "I", that scanning device — that point — that essence — that place beyond. A place where "I" existed independent of social and physical identity. That which was I was beyond Life and Death. And something else — that "I" Knew — it really Knew. It was wise, rather than just knowledgeable. It was a voice inside that spoke truth. I recognized it, was one with it, and felt as if my entire life of looking to the outside world for reassurance — David Reisman's other-directed being, was over.

“The nature of life was a mystery to me. All the stuff I was teaching was just like little molecular bits of stuff but they didn't add up to a feeling anything like wisdom.”

Ram Dass buch Be Here Now

Be Here Now (1971)
Kontext: Before March 6th, which was the day I took Psylocybin, one of the psychedelics, I felt something was wrong in my world, but I couldn't label it in any way so as to get hold of it. I felt that the theories I was teaching in psychology didn't make it, that the psychologists didn't really have a grasp of the human condition, and that the theories I was teaching, which were theories of achievement and anxiety and defense mechanisms and so on, weren't getting to the crux of the matter.
My colleagues and I were 9 to 5 psychologists: we came to work every day and we did our psychology, just like you would do insurance or auto mechanics, and then at 5 we went home and were just as neurotic as we were before we went to work. Somehow, it seemed to me, if all of this theory were right, it should play more intimately into my own life. I understood the requirement of being "objective" for a scientist, but this is a most naive concept in social sciences as we are finding out....
Something was wrong. And the something wrong was that I just didn't know, though I kept feeling all along the way that somebody else must know even though I didn't. The nature of life was a mystery to me. All the stuff I was teaching was just like little molecular bits of stuff but they didn't add up to a feeling anything like wisdom. I was just getting more and more knowledgeable.

“We had gotten over the feeling that one experience was going to make you enlightened forever.”

Ram Dass buch Be Here Now

Be Here Now (1971)
Kontext: We had gotten over the feeling that one experience was going to make you enlightened forever. We saw that it wasn't going to be that simple.
And for five years I dealt with the matter of "coming down." The coming down matter is what led me to the next chapter of this drama. Because after six years, I realized that no matter how ingenious my experimental designs were, and how high I got, I came down.
At one point I took five people and we locked ourselves in a building for three weeks and we took 400 micrograms of LSD every four hours. That is 2400 micrograms of LSD a day, which sounds fancy, but after your fist dose, you build a tolerance; there's a refractory period. We finally were just drinking out of the bottle, because it didn't seem to matter anymore. We'd just stay at a plateau. We were very high. What happened in those three weeks in that house, no one would ever believe, including us. And at the end of the three weeks, we walked out of the house and within a few days, we came down!
And it was a terribly frustrating experience, as if you came into the kingdom of heaven and you saw how it all was and you felt these new states of awareness, and then you got cast out again.

“I understood the requirement of being "objective" for a scientist, but this is a most naive concept in social sciences as we are finding out.”

Ram Dass buch Be Here Now

Be Here Now (1971)
Kontext: Before March 6th, which was the day I took Psylocybin, one of the psychedelics, I felt something was wrong in my world, but I couldn't label it in any way so as to get hold of it. I felt that the theories I was teaching in psychology didn't make it, that the psychologists didn't really have a grasp of the human condition, and that the theories I was teaching, which were theories of achievement and anxiety and defense mechanisms and so on, weren't getting to the crux of the matter.
My colleagues and I were 9 to 5 psychologists: we came to work every day and we did our psychology, just like you would do insurance or auto mechanics, and then at 5 we went home and were just as neurotic as we were before we went to work. Somehow, it seemed to me, if all of this theory were right, it should play more intimately into my own life. I understood the requirement of being "objective" for a scientist, but this is a most naive concept in social sciences as we are finding out....
Something was wrong. And the something wrong was that I just didn't know, though I kept feeling all along the way that somebody else must know even though I didn't. The nature of life was a mystery to me. All the stuff I was teaching was just like little molecular bits of stuff but they didn't add up to a feeling anything like wisdom. I was just getting more and more knowledgeable.

“Be here now.”

Ram Dass buch Be Here Now

Quelle: Be Here Now

“We're here to awaken from the illusion of separateness”

Quelle: How Can I Help? Stories and Reflection on Service

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