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Paperback The Only Dance There Is: Talks at the Menninger Foundation, 1970, and Spring Grove Hospital, 1972 Book

ISBN: 0385084137

ISBN13: 9780385084130

The Only Dance There Is: Talks at the Menninger Foundation, 1970, and Spring Grove Hospital, 1972

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Book Overview

This book is based on talks by Ram Dass at the Menninger Foundation in 1970 and at the Spring Grove Hospital in Maryland in 1972. The text grew out of the interaction between Ram Dass and the spiritual seekers in attendance at these talks.

The result of this unique exchange is a useful guide for understanding the nature of consciousness--useful both to other spiritual seekers and to formally trained psychologists. It is also a celebration of...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Hip and Full of Cosmic Insights

"I can only believe in a God that dances..." -Friedrich Nietzsche I love Ram Dass. For those of you who are in the "dark" about him, he is formerly known as Richard Alpert...no relation to Herb. He and fellow psychoanalyst, Timothy Leary (anyone ever hear of him) promoted LSD as the way to change EVERYTHING in your life. From curing alcoholism to feeling as though there is a deeper side to everything that we see, LSD was the "wonder drug" that made it all possible. Instead of going fullbore into the trip that made Leary so famous, Alpert went to India seeking Spirituality and came back as Ram Dass. You see, when the consciousness changes, the name changes, as well. Our name must reflect our inner nature. In some circles I am known as Mi Che Lob...which simply means, I like Michelob beer... This book is a written account of Dass' visits to various institutions. He was trying to get "prisoners" to see that there is way out of the game they were currently in. Whether we're in a brick and iron facility or in a prison of our own making makes little difference to Ram Dass, we can be free from those prisons when we begin to identify ourselves not with a body, but with the Spirit of all Creation...with God...y'see, Christianity does not own God. They would like to think that they do, but God does not promote only one type of religion, God does not only allow "certain" people to experience bliss and peace, God does not vote Republican. God is the Impersonal made personal; a Love that knows no bounds that is within and around each being. Everything is God and God is everything. This is the book that got me to start chanting OM MANI PADME AUM every morning and every evening and got me strange looks from my dad. It helped me to clarify what I really wanted from my life and it made me realize with real eyes all I really want is God. I may say I want riches, or power, or money, or sex, or Michelob beer, but what I really want is a feeling that none of these things can ever provide for in the long haul...only in seeking the Eternal can I find true peace and bliss. This is not to say that a million dollars, a prestigious career, a fabulous sex life with my soul mate, and good food and drink cannot provide happiness, they most certainly can...and do! But one must always remember that in back of all form is No Form. You see, people in the west tend to think that one can either "have" God or riches. We don't understand that when we have God in our hearts, we are in the lap of riches. That is why the Master Jesus said, "Seek ye first the Kingdom of God within you...and all things will be added..." Heaven is a consciousness, an awareness, a feeling of being full already. Maybe this is why we are such an addicted bunch of people. We keep reaching for things that never really fill us up because we are reaching for things that cannot outlast themselves, but when we reach for that which has no beginning and no ending, we reach for the only thing

It answers many of your questions and asks many more of you

Ram Dass has the remarkable ability to deal with profound topics - the planes of existence, chakras, the nature of Being in his unique, effervescent, frank, and lucid style. The backdrop of Ram Dass - an acid researching, Harvard psychologist, who went to India for answers to his questions on existence, mysticism, and spirituality, is needless to say, unconventional. I frankly didn't know what to expect from the book. And I was not only surprised beyond my expectations, but also intrigued to a point where I rediscovered many of my latent questions about life. If you are coming from a path where you've read some of these: Lobsang Rampa, Aldous Huxley, Blake, Sri Aurobindo, Gurdjeff, or others who try to explain eastern philosophy/mysticism/what lies beyond/Karma/astral travel/the meaning of life, in a manner that we can understand, this is definitely a great book for you. Good look, I hope the book gives you some "answers" on your quest!

Brilliant spiritual reflections from Ram Dass

An excellent, underrated spiritual book. Ram Dass is brilliant, spontaneous, and loving -- his messages are clear as a bell. For reference, the book is a sort of "transcript" of talks given at the menninger Foundation in 1970 and at Spring Grove hospital in 1972.Here is a classic quote from the book: "I used to hang out with the Mellon Family. The Mellon family is very rich. Each of the parents has 700 million dollars. That's rich in my book. The kids were poor. They each had only 20 million. I hung out with one of these kids who had 20 million dollars and he felt like a bum... That's far out from my point of view."Ram Dass skillfully uses stories like this to illustrate the spiritual truths that craving objects leads to suffering, that peace of mind lies within, and so on.Excellent book. Thanks Ram!

the only book there is

This is a great book. I highly suggest this book for anyone interested in western culture connected to eastern religion. Ram talks of everything from chakras to love. but mainly its about consciousness and the nature of it. The dance of life or in Ram's words "the only dance there is"
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