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MENTAL FURNITURE #7
G. I. Gurdjieff
©1997 Dennis Leri
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"If a man could understand
all the horror of the lives of ordinary people who are turning round in
a circle of insignificant aims, if he could understand what they are
losing, he would understand that there can only be one thing that is
serious for him - to escape from the general law, to be free. What can
be serious for a man in prison who is condemned to death? Only one
thing: How to save himself, how to escape: nothing else is serious." -
G.I. Gurdjieff
It was late in the morning or perhaps it was late in the afternoon and
Moshe was concluding an interview with a writer for Psychology Today:
Writer: "It would seem that your ideas and your methods have much in
common with the work of Milton Erickson."
Moshe: "Oh yes, that's true. I have a tremendous degree of respect for
his work. And I met him. Margaret Mead introduced us. But, you know,
while one can see similarities in my work to Milton Erickson's, the
person I feel I have the most kinship with is (G.I.) Gurdjieff."
The interview was never published. The writer moved on to the NY Times. Maybe someone, say Franz
Wurm, can shed light on Moshe's relationship to the Gurdjieff "Work"
and the Gurdjieff community. Was it direct or indirect? Historical
fact: Moshe met Ida Rolf at a conference put on by the noted student of
Gurdjieff, J.G. Bennett.
George Ivanovich Gurdjieff was born 1872? 1877? in the Caucasus region
of what is now Russia. The so called "rascal sage" heralded the coming
of ancient and esoteric Eastern teachings to the West. Neither a
modernist nor a purveyor of any "isms," he rather proclaimed there to
be eternal Truths (with a capital T), that there are people who know
and live those Truths and that Objective knowledge of the Real is
possible. His work lives on in various guises amongst groups that are
not so much secret as private. Much has been written about Gurdjieff.
If you choose, you can find Gurdjieffian books in almost any esoteric
bookstore or in regular bookstore in their religion or spiritual
sections. Moshe recommended reading A.R. Orage's Psychological
Exercises and P.D. Ouspensky's, In
Search of the Miraculous. Perhaps some of the flavor will come
through. But, knowing how difficult it would be to fully comprehend the
Feldenkrais Method by reading our books, you can be assured it would be
much more difficult to understand Gurdjieff's work through books alone.
And as a flavor it DID figure into Moshe's stew.
"...we must examine the fundamental law that creates all phenomena in
all the diversity or unity of all the universes. "This is the 'Law of
Three' or the law of the three principles or the three forces. It
consists of the fact that every phenomenon, on whatever scale and in
whatever world it may take place, from molecular to cosmic phenomena,
is the result of the combination or the meeting of three different and
opposing forces. Contemporary thought realizes the existence of two
forces for the production of a phenomenon: force and resistance,
positive and negative electricity, male and female cells and so on. No
question has ever been raised as to the third, or if it has been raised
it has scarcely been heard.
"According to real, exact knowledge one force, or two forces, can never
produce a phenomenon. The presence of a third force is necessary, for
it is only with the help of the a third force that the first two can
produce what may be called a phenomenon, no matter in what sphere.
"The teaching of the three forces is at the root of all ancient
systems. The first force may be called active or positive; the second,
passive or negative; the third, neutralizing. But these are merely
names, for in reality all three forces are equally active and appear as
active, passive, and neutralizing only at their meeting points, that is
to say, only in relation to one another at a given moment." (G.I.
Gurdjieff quoted in P.D. Ouspensky, In
Search of the Miraculous, pg. 75)
In one's life the Law of Three can be seen to be operative in any
number of situations. One undertakes to accomplish something. One
encounters resistance or inertia. Lacking both a reason and the will to
continue one gives up or attempts something else. If we don't have the
resolve, if our aim is not to persevere, the world provides us with the
reasons to quit. But, it is the aim provided by "the Work" that
sustains one's efforts. To counter the vicious circularity of the
dyadic action-reaction dynamic a third force is needed. The third force
neutralizes not by eliminating the other two so much as providing a
neutral way of observing, of attending, of sustaining participation.
Habits of attention and one's consequent identification of and to what
one attends to are insidious and not easily discerned. And why bother
anyway? Yet, somehow and in some way we sense there must be something
other than either our individual or our collective subjective
cognitions and perceptions. Maybe the very modes of attentional habits
can be examined? Is the active man or woman really active? Maybe their
activity is merely an habitual and therefore passive response to the
world. And it can be asked of the passive person what kind of active
dis-stance must be effected to not engage? To undertake an examination
of our habits a third force must be brought in that allows us to see,
to bear witness to the other two.
Gurdjieff said that in undertaking to do "the Work," that is, to
deliberately intend to realize one's full humanity, three components
are required: that we work for ourselves; that we work for others; and
that we work for "the Work" itself. One usually works for one's self or
for others. But echoing Rabbi Hillel, "If I am not for myself who am I,
and if I am only for myself what am I?" there can be a context in which
one can work for one's self, for and with others and for "the Work." In
assessing how people work, 'teach,' or 'train' in a Feldenkrais
training program I have noticed something similar. Some people are full
of themselves or perhaps they are out for themselves. In those cases
attention to the individuals within the group suffers and the Method
doesn't reach them. Some people put their focus almost completely
outside themselves, they live only for other individuals. In those
cases attention to their own needs, to the long term needs of the group
and to the Method are diminished. What kind of example are they
providing? And with some others who work primarily for the Method
alone, the teaching seems sterile and abstract. But there are those
work for themselves, for others and who also work for the Feldenkrais
Method. The consequences of coordinating all three can be very
different than can be predicted from any one stance considered alone or
in dyadic relationship.
Working earnestly to sustain and recreate the Method allows one to
attend to one's needs, the needs of others and gives the Method its
due. To practice the Feldenkrais Method, or perhaps to view the
Feldenkrais Method as a practice means one cannot develop one's self
and not work to develop others. Neither does it mean one can develop
others while not developing one's self. The Feldenkrais Method must
simultaneously lead to the development of others, one's self, and the
Method itself. But the Law of Three is subtle and not obviously
obvious: "at a given moment" the practitioner can be active and
initiating relative to the passive student and the sustaining or
neutralizing Method. Or the practitioner could be passive or denying
while the student is active and the Method sustaining. Or the Method
could be active while the student is sustaining and the practitioner
passive. And so on. Each member of the practitioner-student-Method
triad can play a positive, negative, or neutral role relative to the
others. The role of the practitioner needs to be played by one who can
remember themselves "at a given moment" as a student, as a living
reference library of the Method, or as a 'teacher.'
It was a hot summer Training Program afternoon and Moshe on an Amherst
video had made an allusion to the work of Gurdjieff. During a Q&A
session it was asked what Moshe had meant by that remark. The answer
given was, "Oh, he is only telling you to take it easy." But what was
he saying? And why? And to whom? Moshe knew that to Gurdjieff human
beings have two aspects: 1) essence, or that which is innate, which is
a person's own, which is what is true in a human being, which develops
into one's individuality and which is controlled by Fate; and 2)
personality, or that which is acquired, which is not one's own, which
is what is false in a human being, which provides the information
necessary to work on the self and which is controlled by Accident. To
be true to one's essence and to manifest it fully one must bring a
human's three centers - head, heart, moving - under the control and
coordination of the will. An aside from Moshe, "...at this point we are
speaking of ...the training of will power and self control, but not for
the purpose of gaining power over ourselves or other people. Correction
of the self, improvement, training of awareness, and other concepts
have been used here to describe various aspects of the idea of
development. Development stresses the harmonious coordination between
structure, function, and achievement. And a basic condition for
harmonious coordination is complete freedom from either self-compulsion
or compulsion from others."(Awareness
Through Movement, pg. 51) According to Gurdjieff, usually one of
the centers predominates and supplanting the functioning of the others
prevents us from living harmoniously. When all three are coordinated,
when a person has acquired a "permanent center of gravity," then real
progress can be made.
A human being is not born with a vibrant awakened soul but must through
"the Work" create one. To create a soul a person must wake up and as a
preliminary to that they must realize that they are asleep, that they
are mechanical, that what for them goes by the name of human existence
is only the movements of an automaton. Most everyone is adrift in the
world because they have no direction and all that befalls them is
simply accidental. What we take as our dreams, hopes, fears, desires,
and our sense of right and wrong are simply things which befall us. Not
understanding how it is that we do not and can not see, keeps us
asleep. As Bob Dylan sung, "You got big dreams baby, but to dream you
know you got to be asleep." But how to change things?
Gurdjieff spent his entire life in the constant creation of means to
accomplish awakening. Accordingly, the Gurdjieffian tradition holds
that one can learn through the proper use of attention that one is
asleep. The first step is to begin by observing the mostly neurotic and
aimless character of our every action, thought or feeling. With that
observation we realize that there is little that we can lay claim to
call our own life. Our attention is captured by inner and outer
identifications that are almost exclusively a product of acculturation
on the one hand and our primitive biology on the other. But attention,
or more precisely attending, seems to neutralize 'sleep.' It is not
unlike modern physics wherein the act of observation changes the
experiment, in our lives attention to our mechanicalness 'wakes' it up.
And it must be noted that the effects of moments of awakening, of
'shocks' to the sleeping individual can have effects upon them not
predictable from their previous personal history. One's personal
psychology can remain intact and unchanged. It doesn't matter. What
matters is that one develop the wish to search for Truth.
To encounter Gurdjieff and to grapple with his ideas makes one able to
more fully appreciate their import upon Moshe. Gurdjieff's voice can be
heard in the following passages from Awareness Through Movement,: "If
it is true that instincts come to us as a matter of inheritance, just
as awareness is inherited, then it will be preferable to perfect our
awareness rather than to suppress the animal that is in us. Awareness
is the highest stage in man's development, and when it is complete it
maintains a harmonious 'rule' over the body's activities. When an
individual is strong, so are his passions, and his ability and vitality
are on the same scale. It is impossible to suppress these prime movers
without reducing his total potential. The improvement of awareness is
preferable to any attempt to overcome instinctive drives. For the more
nearly complete a man's awareness becomes, the more he will be able to
satisfy his passions without infringing on the supremacy of awareness.
And every action will have become more human."(Awareness Through Movement, pgs.
172-3) And, "...the degree of awareness differs greatly between
different individuals, far more than the relative distribution of other
faculties. Further, there are also great periodic variations in the
individual's awareness and its value relative to other aspects of his
personality. There may be a low point at which awareness may disappear
momentarily or for a period. More rarely there may be a high point at
which there is a harmonious unity, with all man's faculties fused into
a single whole." In those moments one, "...grasps that his small world
and the great world around are but one and that in this unity he is no
longer alone."(Awareness Through
Movement, pgs. 53-4)
To take to heart Moshe's reminder that ease of movement, gracefulness,
better posture, etc., i.e., the effects of lessons, are trivial begs
the question, "Trivial next to what?" By juxtaposing Moshe Feldenkrais
and G.I. Gurdjieff we can get hints about the role of the non-trivial,
or the miraculous in Gurdjieff's sense, in our Method.
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