THE SHADOWS OF IDEAS A Distant Glimpse of
GURDJIEFF
John Shirley
[(c) Copyright 1994 by John Shirley.
Distributed online with the author's
permission. Please do not redistribute in
incomplete or altered form. Originally
published in Fringe Ware Review #5.]
A young woman from California, so the story
goes, was listening to a talk given by a
spiritual master who happened to be in the
Sufi tradition. The master was very old; the
woman very young. Finally, after a long
lecture, the chirpy, beaming young lady piped
up from the back, "But what about LOVE?! You
haven't said much about LOOOOOVVVVE!" "What did you say, young lady?" "I said, What about Love?" "And what is that?" "You mean - you're asking me what Love
is?! Love is....LOOOOVVE! Love! LOVE! Love
is...well...Don't you know what it is?" "Yes," he said. "But I don't discuss it
with people who can't identify it."
What is love? What is life? What is
death? We're in the midst of life; we're all
going to die; we all have had experience of
love, or we think we have. Do we really
know what any of these things are? And,
equally important, do we know how to ask the
questions so that we can have some hope of
finding the answers?
There was a man who provided a body of
ideas which both asked the questions and
foreshadowed the answers. Some answers he
gave forthrightly, and these, if true, are
very startling indeed. This man was born in
Russian Armenia, probably in 1866, and died
in 1949, in Paris, whence he had led his
followers to escape the Bolsheviks and the
murderous chaos of the Russian Revolution.
His name was George Ivanovitch Gurdjieff. He
was, some said, a mystic; he was surely a
philosopher, and a teacher. He spent decades
traveling Asia Minor and the far East seeking
real answers to real questions. Why are we
here? Is there a God? What happens after
death? Are there higher levels of being? In
his Seeking, "Gurdjieff was utterly possessed
by his aim," says his biographer, James
Moore. "Every atom of stoicism inculcated in
him by [his father] was mobilized."
In the course of his years of seeking,
Gurdjieff fell ill with some of the most
pugnacious micro-organisms the East could
muster; and more than once he was grievously
wounded by stray bullets, as he skirted the
edges of wars and revolutions. He spent years
in monasteries in Central Asia, including a
spiritual community in the mountains of
Bokhara, the Hindu Kush of Afghanistan; he
was apparently in close contact with mystics
tucked away in the esoteric circles of the
Russian Orthodox orders; he studied in Tibet
and India. Eventually he returned to Russia,
and found students in Moscow and St.
Petersburg, not least of these the famous PD
Ouspensky, author of Tertium Organum and a
partial exegesis of Gurdjieff's system, In
Search of the Miraculous: Fragments of an
Unknown Teaching. Ouspensky later broke with
Gurdjieff, and formulated his own (but highly
derivative) version of the teaching. Both he
and Gurdjieff called the system The Fourth
Way.
It seems likely that some of Gurdjieff's
ideas sprang from his own brilliant powers of
observation, investigation and
syncretization. But there are Christian
mystics who claim Gurdjieff's teaching is
exposed Christian Mysticism. There are Sufis
(Islamic mystics) who claim that it is
essentially a Sufi teaching. One Sufi
teacher told me that Gurdjieff was preparing
the West for Sufism; possibly some of
Gurdjieff's adherents feel that Sufism was
preparing the world for Gurdjieff. Others
intuit that the core of his teaching derives
from a mystic school that predates all known
religions and sects; a teaching that may be
the taproot of all esoteric teachings.
Whatever its origins, Gurdjieff's "unknown
teaching" is vast, complex, many layered, and
yet, somehow, tellingly consistent, from
layer to layer; profoundly all of a piece. In
light of this resonant consistency, there is
perhaps no hubris in Gurdjieff's having
titled his cycle of books: ALL AND
EVERYTHING. Despite parallels in other esoteric
traditions, Gurdjieff's teaching is a special
balance of Western rationality and Eastern
gnosis. Gurdjieff ridiculed occultists, and
warned about charlatanism. Gurdjieff scholar
and Professor of Philosophy Jacob Needleman
asserts, "For Gurdjieff the deeply
penetrating influence of scientific thought
in modern life was not something merely to be
deplored, but to be understood as the channel
through which the eternal Truth must first
find its way to the human heart." Gurdjieff
asked that his students verify, repeatedly,
the reality of their esoteric perceptions.
Since we're in a constant state of self
deception anyway, he knew how easily -
indeed, how inevitably - the imagination
would distort esoteric work. "In most
cases," Gurdjieff remarked to Ouspensky,
"what is called 'cosmic consciousness' is
simply fantasy, associative daydreaming
connected with intensified work of the
emotional center. . .a subjective emotional
experience of the level of dreams." As he
told his students at his Institute for the
Harmonious Development of Man, "If you have
not by nature a critical mind, your staying
here is useless."
A caveat. Gurdjieff drew a sharp
distinction between knowledge, in the
ordinary sense, and understanding.
Understanding, he maintained, real
understanding, requires a significant degree
of inner being. A computer cannot process
certain things without enough RAM; a man
cannot understand certain ideas fully unless
he has enough sheer Being. And some ideas
must be understood with one's whole being. I, personally, understand little. I
can't hope to convey more than faint shadows
of these ideas and I make no testimony as to
their rightness, except to verify that
Gurdjieff's ideas resonate with a kind of
philosophical verisimilitude almost without
parallel.
Common sense supposes that to understand
why we're alive - what constitutes the cosmos
and our place in it - we ought to start with
ourselves. We ought to know ourselves; this
was the advice of the classic philosophers -
who seemed to understand that it was easier
said than done. Under the usual conditions, Gurdjieff
bluntly informs us, we cannot know ourselves,
for the simple reason that we are asleep. We
are asleep, even when we imagine that we are
awake. Man is a machine, Gurdjieff tells us,
with characteristic unsentimentality, an
automaton of reactions and reactions to the
reactions. We imagine ourselves building,
creating, moving alertly through the world:
we are kidding ourselves. We are, says Gurdjieff, lost in waking
dreams and rigorously tracked neurotic
fixations; when we think we are "doing" we
are simply caught up in complex, fantasy-
tinged reacting. We are asleep. We are not
free.
There are three traditional paths to
awakening. The first Way is the way of the
fakir, demanding physical control and
excruciating asceticism; the second is the
Way of the monk: the way of devotion, faith,
the heart; the third is the Way of the yogi:
the path of knowledge, of mind. Gurdjieff's
own Fourth Way combines elements of the first
three, and is further distinct in that it
calls its practitioners to work within
themselves while functioning in the ordinary,
workaday world. It requires no monastic
withdrawal from life - ordinary life is its
resource, its basic material. "I wish to
create," Gurdjieff wrote, "conditions in
which a man would be continuously reminded of
the sense and aim of his existence by an
unavoidable friction between his conscience
and the automatic manifestations of his
nature." In ordinary life each and every
encounter, lived consciously, can teach us
something about ourselves.
Gurdjieff called us "three-brained
beings", each "brain" corresponding to an
inner center: the intellectual center, the
emotional center, the body-ruling
instinctive/moving center. Each of these
three centers is divided into sub-centers,
for example, the intellectual segment of the
instinctive center, which does most of our so-
called "thinking" for us. Much of our
"thinking" is simply a lower center's mis-use
of intellectual faculties, a squandering of
inner energies in desire-based brain
activity. All our Centers are similiarly
imbalanced. The Fourth Way calls us to work
on all three Centers at once, harmonizing
them into one conscious, evolving being. "The
modern person," says Professor Needleman,
"has no conception of how self-deceptive a
life can be that is lived in only one part of
oneself. The head, the emotions, and the body
each have their own perceptions and actions,
and each, in itself, can live a simulacrum of
human life." We are born, according to Gurdjieff,
with an Essence, our essential self, a
particularity that is determined by heredity
and "planetary influences", but which is also
full of promise. This promise is largely
shackled by the encroachment of personality.
Our habitual identification with learned
personality traps us in a false self. Or
rather, we're caught up in a series of false
selves, scores of "parasitic identities",
bullying little "I's", each "I" with its own
agenda, each some facet of the distracting
costume-jewelry of the false personality. If someone flatters us, one "I" takes
the helm, an "I" which feels good about
itself, and responds positively to the
flatterer; if someone speaks ill of us,
another, more resentful "I" emerges and
responds angrily. We are in a "good mood" if
"good" things happen to us; a "bad mood" or
"depressed" when we get negative input. We
have no truly consistent being. Each bullying
"I" is like a program, a software engaged in
running a specific response that has been
triggered by specific input. Our
disconnectedness with our actual, essential
self prevents us from truly waking; our state
of waking-sleep keeps us reacting
mechanically to stimuli, squandering energy
on dreaming that could be used to nurture
higher levels of being. As Needleman puts it, "There is no
authentic I am in [man's] presence, but
only an egoism which masquerades as the
authentic self, and whose machinations poorly
imitate the normal human functions of
thought, feeling and will...Man identifies -
that is, squanders his conscious energy, with
every passing thought, impulse, and
sensation... a continuous self-deception and
a continuous fear which are of such a
pervasively painful nature that man is
constantly driven to ameliorate this
condition through the endless pursuit of
social recognition, sensory pleasure, or the
vague and unrealizable goal of 'happiness'."
We snuggle into our slumber under the
blanket of our cherished, socially-reinforced
illusions. The illusion of
self-determination, of freedom, of
wakefulness, is maintained thanks partly to
the presence of what Gurdjieff calls
buffers - "They are created," Gurdjieff
avers, "not by nature, but by man himself,
although involuntarily. The cause of their
appearance is the existence in man of many
contradictions; contradictions of opinions,
feelings, sympathies, words, and actions. If
a man throughout the whole of his life were
to feel all the contradictions that are
within him, he could not live and act as
calmly as he lives and acts now. He would
have constant friction, constant unrest...If
a man were to feel all these contradictions
he would feel what he really is. He would
feel that he is mad...Buffers are created
slowly and gradually. Very many 'buffers' are
created artificially through 'education'.
Others are created under the hypnotic
influence of all surrounding life...It is
very hard to live without 'buffers'. But
they keep man from the possibility of inner
development because 'buffers' are made to
lessen shocks and it is only shocks that can
lead a man out of the state in which he
lives, that is, waken him. 'Buffers' lull a
man to sleep, give him the agreeable and
peaceful sensation that all will be well,
that no contradictions exist and that he can
sleep in peace. ''."Buffers." are appliances by
means of which a man can always be in the
right.' 'Buffers' help a man not to feel his
conscience..."
It's astonishing how little of ourselves
we feel, even physically. We live in our body
and normally sense it very little, in any
conscious way. And it's correspondingly
amazing how much transpires emotionally and
instinctively in us, which we normally do
not feel. Most psychologists agree we are
driven by unconscious impulses; many
acknowledge a "script" driving our responses
- but do we sense these patterns in
ourselves? The primary forces behind the way
we live our lives are cut off from us, under
prevailing conditions. Without making a
conscious, finely-directed effort to
objectively, consistently observe ourselves
inwardly and outwardly - self-observation,
Gurdjieff called it - we are blind to the
very forces that define us. According to
Gurdjieff each of us is formed around
something he called the Chief Feature, the
organizing principle of the personality, and
a primary obstacle to awakening. This is a
big characteristic, an overall pattern
coloring all our behavior, which is often
perfectly obvious to our friends and family
but - no matter how many times we're told
about it - entirely opaque to us. It's our
most obvious feature - and we're numb to it! No matter how supposedly introverted we
are, the likelihood is we know ourselves
scarcely at all. Our buffer-hidden contradictions, our
mechanicality, our self-concealment - these
phenomena could explain a great deal of our
swept-along, baffling and violent lives.
But is there something else? Is there
somewhere within us an inner connection to
the cosmos, some hidden node of real
consciousness, the organizing principle of a
Man without quotation marks? And how do we
reach it? We're told that certain, persistent
longterm efforts, through a variety of
methods prescribed by Gurdjieff, can create
a higher self that is a vehicle, a worthy
throne, for the deathless I. It's said we can
formulate, like an oyster making a pearl, a
conscious self that can rise above
mechanicality. Man survives death only to the
extent this "I" has been created. Otherwise,
at death, we're absorbed back into the basic
stuff of the universe, and a particular
bandwith of energy - which it is our role,
along with all living organisms, to transform
- is then utilized by certain levels of the
living cosmos as part of a cosmic ecology. 'You got to serve somebody', Bob Dylan
sang. One can go with the general current,
manifesting a semiconscious existence,
generating a crude grade of energies to be
used by the cosmos on one level - or one can
choose the harder Way, to try to be, to
consciously evolve, and move toward the
capacity to receive and to generate a finer
energy, in a higher service to the forces of
creation. Either way, nothing is wasted -
which idea dovetails with scientific
observations of nature: Everything, in
nature, is "food" for something; everything
is utilized.
Gurdjieff recognizes seven general
types of Man - Man Number Seven is almost
unimaginably evolved relative to us. He
defines four levels of consciousness: 1) what
we usually call sleep, 2) our normal state of
so-called waking consciousness, 3) self
consciousness - characterized partly by
constant "self-remembering", and a capacity
to act with non-mechanical independence - and
4) objective consciousness, the level of
enlightened, transcendent Being. To pursue awakened, independent Being is
harrowingly difficult. One needs a relentless
will to work, rooted in an inexhaustible
Wish, a hunger to learn to be - and, even
that is not enough. One also needs help from
others. And there's worse news yet: authentic
help is hard to find, since few in our world
are awake. Few have created real I. We live
in a world of sleepwalkers, and it shows. As
James Moore puts it, "We are all asleep.
This is not a metaphor but a fact. It is also
a social perception more subversive and
revolutionary than anything remotely
conceived by all the Troskys and Kropotkins
of history; an idea which, like death and the
sun, cannot be looked at steadily - a world
in trance!"
We are, at least, given a glimmer of the
possibility of breaking the trance in the
spontaneous episodes of
self-remembering we have all experienced;
we've felt it in moments of danger, extreme
novelty, intensity, bringing the
unforgettable impression of 'I'm here!'
Suddenly, for a split second, we are to some
extent...awake. "It is Gurdjieff's demand,"
says Moore, "that we acclimatize ourselves,
by slow degrees, to living at this altitude.
'A man may be born, but in order to be born,
he must first die, and in order to die he
must first awake.'" Perhaps one step in this process of
"dying", is to recognize one's current state
of relative non-being. If we're not
conscious, are we really here, in any
important sense? How often are we really
conscious? We all have the experience of
starting off on an errand - and simply
finding oneself there, completing the errand,
with no memory of the trip in between. Where
were we, in the interim? In daydreams, in
identification with some private dilemma -
gone. One aspect of the Gurdjieff work is the
simple perception of the weakness of our
being, as dramatized by our tendency to lapse
into non-consciousness. Go on an errand, try
to stay conscious the whole time - to be
there, completely - and you'll find you
can't do it without a lapse. Not
consistently, even for three minutes. The
realization of the weakness of one's own
attention is startling and instructive. To
perceive it - to take it in fully and
objectively - is to gradually build sections
of a bridge of knowledge within oneself,
across which a degree of higher consciousness
might eventually travel. Or so it is said.
So far as I can discover, most esoteric
work involves special efforts of attention;
in the Gurdjieff work attention is directed
outward to the external life and
simultaneously inward to the inner world.
One's inner life is normally in chaos and
imbalance; with a special work of attention
it can by degrees become unified. Gurdjieff provided numerous techniques
to this end - such as a form of sacred dance
called the Movements, and an infinitely
refinable discipline of meditation - which I
am not qualified to discuss.
Our struggle to be takes place at the
bottom of a scale of being. We are at the ass-
end of the cosmos, Gurdjieff tells us, a
place in the scale of the cosmos virtually
dense with restrictive laws. Farther up the
cosmic scale, up steps corresponding to the
harmonic scale, we eventually come to the
Absolute, the allness, the prime mover,
subject to only one law: unity. In the next
world down, the level of all worlds and
galaxies, there are three orders of cosmic
law; in the next, designated All Suns, there
are six; in the next, at the level of the
Sun, there are twelve; at the level of the
planets, twentyfour; at the level of our own
woebegone world, fortyeight orders of laws.
Because we live "under fortyeight laws" we
are far from the will of the Absolute,
according to this system. We move toward the
Absolute, toward liberation, by transcending
the mechanical laws shackling us. The seven
levels of the Ray of Creation are seven
levels of matter; each level has its own rate
of vibration. The Absolute vibrates most
rapidly and is least dense; our level
vibrates slowly, through a murky density.
I recently heard an astrophysicist say
that at the beginning of Creation, before the
Big Bang, there was, indeed, Unity, one law,
or two - afterwards a sort of fractured
symmetry led to the creation of the four
forces, gravitation, electromagnetism, the
strong nuclear force and the weak nuclear
force, and all the laws proceeding from the
interaction of those forces: the closer you
get to the beginning of Time, the fewer laws;
the farther away, the more laws. Gurdjieff - or his teachers -
anticipated much of quantum physics. For
example, these Heisenbergian remarks from
Gurdjieff in 1915: "Matter or substance
presupposes the existence of a force or
energy. This does not mean that a dualistic
conception of the world is necessary. The
concepts of matter and force are as relative
as everything else. In the Absolute, where
all is one, matter and force are also one.
But in this connection matter and force are
not taken as real principles of the world in
itself, but as properties or characteristics
of the phenomenal world observed by us." Giving further definition to Gurdjieff's
cosmology is the Law of Three and the Law of
Seven. I haven't got space (in more sense
than one) to do more than hint of them here.
The Law of Three breaks down all events into
three forces: active, passive, and
neutralizing. The Law of Seven provides a
systematization of the course of movements of
force through a series of events. Movement of
force up or down the scale through the seven
"notes" of the corresponding harmonic scale
can proceed only if given "shocks", conscious
impetus at specific intervals, but is usually
lawfully deflected by countervailing forces
at predictable places along the scale. Hence
the best laid plans of mice and men often go
awry. That is, in Gurdjieff there's a
meaning, to everything, including failure.
Nothing is meaningless, seen in the
perspective of the scale of things;
everything is useful to the cosmos.
There are various counterfeit
"Gurdjieff groups" and "Gurdjieff Centers"
offering a franchised variety of "liberation"
- including one that begins with asking for
ten per cent of your income. From what I can
find out, these outfits are highly suspect. So far as I can judge, only one clearly
authentic transmission of Gurdjieff's
teaching exists, and its transmitters can be
reached in San Francisco, New York, Paris and
many other major cities. This is the
Gurdjieff Foundation, established after his
death by such luminaries as Jeanne de
Salzmann - who was Gurdjieff's greatest
student - and others who worked with closely
with him. The Gurdjieff work is daunting. Not that
anyone mistreats you, at least at the
Gurdjieff Foundation - by all reports they
are gentle, compassionate people, who do not
exploit or abuse students. But the inner work
itself, the process of awakening, is lengthy
and is said to be sometimes painful (although
not harmful); it involves, among other
things, seeing oneself as one really is,
and abiding in "conscious suffering": that
is, what one suffers, one suffers
consciously. Moreover, the world itself is
apparently designed to discourage awakening;
to place seemingly endless obstacles in the
way. One of Gurdjieff's aphorisms goes,
"Blessed is he who has a soul, blessed is he
who has none, but woe and grief to him who
has it in embryo." You might prefer to sleep.
Introductory Reading:
In Search of the Miraculous: Fragments of an
Unknown Teaching by PD Ouspensky (Harcourt
Brace Jovanovitch). [The best
single-volume introduction to the Gurdjieff
ideas].
Views From the Real World by GI Gurdjieff
(Arkana Books)
Meetings with Remarkable Men by GI
Gurdjieff (Arkana)
Our Life with Mr. Gurdjieff by Thomas and
Olga de Hartmann (Penguin)
All and Everything: Beelzebub's Tales to his
Grandson by GI Gurdjieff (Dutton) (NOTE:
This is Gurdjieff's magnum opus, an extremely
challenging book.)
Related Works:
Mount Analogue by Rene Daumal (Shambhala
books)
Gurdjieff a biography by James Moore
(Element books)
Living Time by Maurice Nicoll
(Shambhala)
The Heart of Philosophy by Jacob Needleman
(HarperSan Francisco)
A Sense of the Cosmos: The Encounter of
Modern Science and Ancient Truth by Jacob
Needleman (Arkana)
Money and the Meaning of Life by Jacob
Needleman (Doubleday)
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