William Patrick Patterson on Gurdjieff video

topic posted Mon, January 12, 2004 - 7:19 PM by  cinnamon

The Making of the Gurdjieff Trilogy


An Interview with William Patrick Patterson


www.gurdjieff-legacy.org/40art...gy.htm
_____





WE INTERVIEWED WILLIAM PATRICK PATTERSON DURING HIS nationwide speaking
tour introducing Gurdjieff‚s Legacy, the concluding installment of his
video trilogy.

The Gurdjieff Journal: Viewing the sheer scale of the video trilogy of
Gurdjieff‚s life and teaching˜one that is shot on-site in Egypt, Russia,
Turkey, France, London and America˜is truly a monumental experience.
Just how long has it taken to complete the trilogy The Life and
Significance of George Ivanovitch Gurdjieff?

William Patrick Patterson: A few lifetimes or a few seconds depending on
one‚s perspective. We began shooting the first video, Gurdjieff in
Egypt, December 1996; finished Gurdjieff‚s Mission in 2002; and
completed the third video of the trilogy, Gurdjieff‚s Legacy, in
February 2003.

TGJ: Where did the idea come from to do a video?

WPP: I was on my way to a meeting in Israel and decided to make a
stopover in Egypt.

I‚d never been much interested in Egypt, believing, as most people do,
that Western civilization began with the Greeks. But seeing the Sphinx,
the Great Pyramid and then going up the Nile to Thebes, modern-day
Luxor, and seeing the Temple of Man, Karnak and the Valley of the Kings
... well, I stood in awe of the immense scale, intelligence and deep
esoteric understanding that once existed.

TGJ: What impressed you the most?

WPP: The whole of it. So to continue ... when I returned to America I
reread the chapter in Meetings with Remarkable Men where Mr. Gurdjieff
sees the map of pre-sand Egypt. I‚d been reading that book for decades
and never asked myself the obvious question: what did he see on the map?

TGJ: Why not?

WPP: The obvious is often what is most hidden. Anyway, Gurdjieff doesn‚t
say directly but later gives the answer about what he saw when he says
he had been "spending all my free time walking among these places [the
Giza Plateau outside Cairo] like one possessed, hoping to find, with the
help of my map of pre-sand Egypt, an explanation of the Sphinx and of
certain other monuments of antiquity." Remember now that he is in search
of the origin of esoteric knowledge and believes it to be the Sarmoung
Brotherhood, which existed in Babylon about 2,500 B.C.E. But in coming
upon the map of pre-sand Egypt he immediately breaks off his search and
goes where?˜to the Giza Plateau.

TGJ: But why would he need an "explanation of the Sphinx"?

WPP: Exactly. The Rosetta Stone had been discovered and deciphered in
the 1820s and every Egyptologist of that day (as well as most of this
day) believed the Sphinx dated from the time of the Great Pyramid, about
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2,750 B.C.E. So why does Gurdjieff need an "explanation"? Well, because
that is what he saw on the map!

TGJ: Couldn‚t he have seen something else?

WPP: What else? The Sphinx is the primordial symbol of esoteric
knowledge.

TGJ: Pre-sand Egypt. What are we talking about in terms of time?

WPP: The time was 7,500 B.C.E. and before. That was when Egypt was
green. Later I came upon a video by John Anthony West, a member of the
Gurdjieff Society in England, who believes that the Sphinx dated from
pre-sand Egypt. He had read Sacred Science by René Schwaller de Lubicz,
the great hermetic Egyptologist, in which de Lubicz says that the
erosion we see on the Sphinx is not caused by wind or sand but water.
West has done a lot of pioneering and innovative work with geologists to
establish the true date of the Sphinx and is still carrying on the
struggle.

TGJ: With this insight why didn‚t you write a book rather than do a
video?

WPP: I‚ve written a number of books so that would not be a challenge.
More importantly, I believe, as never before, we need to build bridges
to young people, and young people seem to be more influenced by video
and film than books. Then, too, I have groups and groups need projects
and what better project to jump into than something none of us knew
anything about.

TGJ: Did you plan a trilogy from the outset?

WPP: No, not at all. Creating a video was a many faceted project. Our
aim was to meet professional standards so that what we did technically
would not take away from the tremendous and unrecognized story we had to
tell of Gurdjieff‚s search in Egypt and Abyssinia.

TGJ: Unrecognized?

WPP: Yes, most people believe that the origin of the Fourth Way was in
Central Asia˜basically Sufi or dervish. Either that or Russian Orthodox
Christianity.

TGJ: Why is that?

WPP: Let‚s get into that later. So, as I was saying, we just hoped we
could complete the first video˜we had no idea of doing a trilogy. But
then on completing Gurdjieff in Egypt it just seemed right and necessary
to tell the entire story.

TGJ: Necessary? Most people know the story don‚t they?

WPP: To some extent. But I believe the emphasis has been ...

TGJ: Wrong?

WPP: The film of Meetings with Remarkable Men, as beautiful and
compelling as it is in many sections, gave only a part of Gurdjieff‚s
life. James Webb‚s biography of Gurdjieff shows prodigious research but
is fanciful at times and biased throughout. James Moore‚s biography is
much better, but I find his vision conventional and limited and the
language too self-referential.

TGJ: What about Bennett‚s Making a New World?

WPP: This is his best book in my opinion. But he believes the origin of
the teaching is Sufi. He, like Ouspensky, has had a significant
influence on framing the public view of the teaching. Just as Ouspensky
believed the teaching was fragmentary˜his view was based solely on the
Russian period of the teaching, and when presented with Gurdjieff‚s
Legominism he thought it was rubbish˜Bennett, too, never seems to have
realized what Gurdjieff says in Search, that "The teaching whose theory
is here being set out is completely self-supporting and independent of
other spiritual lines and it has been completely unknown up to the
present time." The emphasis is mine.

TGJ: You lost me.

WPP: Bennett was introduced to the teaching three times. In
Constantinople in 1921. At the Prieuré in 1923. And in Paris in 1948.
From what Bennett reports in Witness, Gurdjieff had high hopes of
Bennett spreading and carrying on the teaching. Instead, Bennett hopped
from the Work to Subud to Catholicism to Idries Shah to Hinduism and
then into some eclectic combination of all these which he taught and
called the Fourth Way. His actions show he never realized that "the
teaching . . . is completely self-supporting and independent of other
spiritual lines."

TGJ: You mean he shouldn‚t have kept searching?

WPP: Like a good many people who enter the Work, he didn‚t realize the
search was over. He had found what he had been searching for. Some
people, you know, are perennial seekers. They "collect" teachings and
teachers but remain aloof, uncommitted. It‚s one form of what I call
esoteric egoism.

TGJ: Let me see if I understand what you‚re saying. Namely, that
Ouspensky‚s and Bennett‚s views have largely framed the
teaching˜Ouspensky in terms of it being fragmentary and Bennett because
he believes it is derivative in origin˜mainly Sufi. Right?

WPP: That‚s good enough for now.

TGJ: So what is your viewpoint?

WPP: Let me first just clear up another strand of thought. In Search
when Gurdjieff is asked "What is the relation of the teaching to
Christianity as we know it?" Gurdjieff replies: "I don‚t know what you
know about Christianity"˜Ouspensky puts the word in italics, noting that
Gurdjieff emphasized the word. This indicates that Gurdjieff is speaking
of a special form of Christianity. "It would be necessary," he says, "to
talk a great deal and to talk for a long time in order to make clear
what you understand by this term. But for the benefit of those who know
already, I will say that, if you like, this is esoteric Christianity."
What does that tell you?

TGJ: That the Work is esoteric Christianity.

WPP: That‚s what it told Boris Mouravieff and his latter-day follower
Robin Amis. But Gurdjieff is not referring to the Christianity we
know˜but the Christianity we don‚t know.

As he says later in Search, "It will seem strange to many people when I
say that this prehistoric Egypt was Christian many thousands of years
before the birth of Christ, that is to say, that its religion was
composed of the same principles and ideas that constitute true
Christianity." So the esoteric Christianity Gurdjieff is referring to is
a Christianity that existed before the birth of Christ and before the
ancient Egyptian religion as we know it˜that is, a prehistoric
Christianity.

TGJ: That really is a revolutionary statement.

WPP: Yes. And what it means is that the Fourth Way predates all the
religions we know. Thinking in a linear way, just because Gurdjieff
introduced the teaching in St. Petersburg in 1912, people have thought
that Sufism, the Cabala, and so forth have all predated the Fourth Way.
But it‚s just the reverse. As Gurdjieff says, we see the world
topsy-turvy. We go into all this in detail in Gurdjieff in Egypt.

TGJ: Was there any overriding structure you followed?

WPP: The trilogy runs on three tracks. The first is the historical, the
second is the people in Gurdjieff‚s life, and the third is the major
tenets of the teaching.

TGJ: So the trilogy tells the history of the Work, as well as giving the
major aspects of the teaching?

WPP: Yes, but the history and its interpretation differ at points from
what is conventionally presumed.

TGJ: What do you mean by that?

WPP: Many of Gurdjieff‚s students who wrote about him, and certainly all
of his critics, speak from their point of view. Everyone levels him to
fit their ideas and beliefs. No one speaks of his mission˜that he came
to give humanity a teaching that would save it from destroying itself.
Everyone seems to unconsciously think he came to awaken and liberate
them. I wanted to give the point of view that is rarely
recognized˜Gurdjieff‚s.

TGJ: Isn‚t that a bit presumptuous?

WPP: Of course. And his view can‚t really be known. But by carefully
considering his mission, what he says and how he lived, I think we can
shine a needed light on his life and teaching and clear up some
misconceptions.

TGJ: How so?

WPP: Once he rediscovered the fundamental ideas and principles of the
teaching in Upper Egypt and Abyssinia he realized that over time
elements of the teaching had drifted northward. So he made a series of
journeys to the Hindu Kush, Siberia and Tibet to collect these elements.
He then reformulated the teaching for modern times and brought it to the
West. As mentioned previously, the teaching, paradoxically, is as old as
it is new.

TGJ: Why did he want to bring the teaching to the West? Why didn‚t he
just stay where he was and introduce the teaching there?

WPP: He realized that humanity was approaching a crucial shock point in
its history. As he says, "Unless the Œwisdom‚ of the East and the
Œenergy‚ of the West are harnessed and used harmoniously the world will
destroy itself."

TGJ: That sounds ominous.

WPP: Yes, but who took that warning seriously? Now, given 9/11, it‚s a
different world, no? He saw that the West was where the power was. So in
1911 he took a 21-year vow to live an artificial life in order to
introduce and establish the teaching in the West. The second video of
the trilogy, Gurdjieff‚s Mission, begins with his coming to St.
Petersburg in 1912, then to Moscow, on to Constantinople, France,
England and America. We followed his path, shooting all the way.

TGJ: Why did he go to St. Petersburg?

WPP: I assume because it was the most cosmopolitan city in Russia, right
on the edge of Europe. He was fluent in Russian, knew the customs and
had friends there. His plan was to form groups, then establish the
Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man, train
helper-instructors who would disseminate the teaching to the major
capitals of the world. He had brought with him a million rubles, two
collections of Chinese cloisonné and many rare carpets.

TGJ: Why so much money?

WPP: As he says in Meetings, he wanted to be dependent on no one. But
let me continue. The plan was on schedule until 1917 and the shock of
the Russian Revolution. It drove him to Tiflis in the Caucasus where he
tried to again set up the Institute. But the uncertainty of the times
and governmental red tape made it impossible. So he left for
Constantinople where he again opened and closed the Institute˜the city
was flooded with refugees and a secular movement was coming to the fore.
Now what to do?

TGJ: Why didn‚t he go to Greece? He was part Greek, knew the language
and so forth?

WPP: The power that will determine the fate of the world lies in Europe
and America. So, though he didn‚t speak the languages, know the customs,
had no friends and little money˜his million Russian rubles were
virtually worthless˜Gurdjieff stepped off into the future. In 1921, he
left for Europe and a year later opened his Institute in France.

TGJ: When you shot in Russia and Constantinople did you come upon
anything interesting in terms of the Work?

WPP: In St. Petersburg we found the street˜Pushkin Street˜where
Gurdjieff lived, the apartment on Liteiny Street where Ouspensky lived
and The Stray Dog café, a haunt of Ouspensky and the intelligentsia and
the art world. It was closed by authorities in 1915 and had just
reopened several months before we arrived.

TGJ: What about the restaurant where Thomas de Hartmann met Gurdjieff?

WPP: Yes, we found that but it‚s a gambling casino now, so we didn‚t
shoot it. In Constantinople we stayed in the Pera district, the European
quarter, and found Yemenici Street and the townhouse where Gurdjieff set
up the Institute. Of course we shot that, as well as the Galata Bridge,
the street life and the train station from which Gurdjieff left for
Europe.

TGJ: You say a second track of the videos is Gurdjieff‚s students.

WPP: Yes, we show the real reasons why Ouspensky left Gurdjieff. They
were not the ones he speaks of in Search. And we follow their
relationship through the years from Ouspensky‚s final break with him in
1924, the final meeting in 1931, and then what befell Ouspensky at the
end of his life. We shot at his estates˜Lyne Place in England and
Mendham in America˜and his grave site.

TGJ: What about Orage?

WPP: This was a much more intricate relationship. Jesse Dwight played a
larger part than is generally thought. In short, Orage wanted his woman
and the teaching, too. Also, Gurdjieff put a lot of pressure on him in
terms of money. Orage never seemed to realize˜at least he never
said˜that Gurdjieff used money as a teaching device. Gurdjieff saw how
fixated Westerners are about "making dollars" and used it. Remember, he
came to Russia with a million rubles, all of which he had earned
himself. Obviously, he didn‚t want money to be a factor.

TGJ: Going back to the origin of the teaching for a moment ... what‚s
the proof that the teaching comes from prehistoric Egypt?

WPP: No proof other than what Gurdjieff says. Do we believe him or not?
If we don‚t, why are we following someone who we don‚t believe? I could
speak for a long time on all the facts that point to the origin of the
Fourth Way being in prehistoric Egypt, but let me just say this: the
question is what came first˜sacred science or religion? If you go to the
Temple of Edfu, about 30 miles up the Nile from Thebes, you find that
its walls, which date back to the Pyramid Age, speak of Seven Sages who
came from the Homeland of the Primeval Ones, an island that sank during
a catastrophic flood. The Seven Sages introduced a high civilization and
religion to Egypt. This is a perfect match with what Gurdjieff says in
the First Series. If we look at Egyptian religion, which I hold sprang
from the Fourth Way, we see its focus was on Being and
self-transformation and immortality. The Egyptians believed you have to
make a soul and there was no differentiation between the spiritual and
the not spiritual. All was spiritual, especially if there was
self-remembering.

TGJ: But the Egyptian religion devolved into animal worship, didn‚t it?

WPP: Yes. Originally, animals were chosen to depict certain attributes
of Being. But then, as you say, it devolved. That was why when Judaism
occurred about 1,100 B.C.E., they banned all images. And Judaism doesn‚t
believe in an afterlife. But then, over time, it rigidified into some
500-plus laws that dictated all human behavior. And, of course, they had
the idea of "the chosen people." As Gurdjieff said, "Moses told them
that, not God."

TGJ: Christianity believes in an afterlife.

WPP: Yes, and so does Islam. In the past, as Gurdjieff said, real
religion consisted of two parts. One part taught what is to be
done˜that‚s the exterior part. And the other part taught how to do what
the first part teaches˜that‚s the esoteric part. When the esoteric part
is lost then religion devolves as it unfortunately has today. It becomes
all words, prohibitions and self-calming, which then rigidifies into
orthodoxy and fundamentalism.

TGJ: That seems to be what we see today.

WPP: Exactly. Religion, in my opinion, is on its deathbed. After the
current quagmire in the Middle East ends people will ask what was the
root cause of the conflict. The answer will be fundamentalism˜Christian,
Jewish, Moslem. With that the new world belief becomes scientific
materialism.

TGJ: Isn‚t it already here?

WPP: The foundations are already in place. A general de facto
declaration is just awaiting the demise of modern religions.

TGJ: What will happen to the Work?

WPP: In my view it can easily make the transition because it‚s a sacred
science. It can accept much of scientific materialism and be accepted by
it. Most important, it can provide the necessary scale and the teaching
and practices to move beyond a strict and limited scientific worldview.

TGJ: What will it take for that to happen?

WPP: Whether the Work makes the transition depends on how it responds
and positions itself. That is the impetus for the trilogy. Gurdjieff
bequeathed to us a great legacy in terms of his Legominism All and
Everything, his music, movements and sacred dances, and exercises. It‚s
for us to commit ourselves to it, make it live. That‚s the point of the
third video Gurdjieff‚s Legacy.

TGJ: Well, that‚s a lot to think about.

WPP: Yes, to ponder.

TGJ: Is this the first trilogy ever done on Gurdjieff and the teaching?

WPP: Yes, Gurdjieff in Egypt is the first video ever made about his
search. And Gurdjieff‚s Mission and Gurdjieff‚s Legacy are the first to
cover the rest of his life. So the trilogy is a perfect complement to
the film, Meetings.

TGJ: What else do you consider important?

WPP: What is important is that the trilogy is a Work project of seven
years duration. We didn‚t do it as a commercial venture. It was our
tribute to Mr. Gurdjieff and his teaching.

TGJ: Well, as a Work project it was certainly better than digging a
ditch.

WPP: No, not at all. To act with intention and not for any personal
reward but for our Being is the one real value. The making of a trilogy
was simply more demanding and complex and ran into years, not hours.

TGJ: Were you surprised that each of the videos won a Gold Award at
WorldFest?

WPP: Absolutely! That each won a Gold Award at such a prestigious
international film festival was more than any of us conceived. And that
the last two videos won Gold Special Jury Awards for Outstanding
Excellence ... well, for that one has to have a great deal of help, and
we did.

TGJ: What kind of help?

WPP: What number Man do you take Mr. Gurdjieff to be?


_____


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posted by:
cinnamon
Los Angeles
  • J
    J
    offline 0

    Re: William Patrick Patterson on Gurdjieff video

    Fri, February 20, 2004 - 10:08 PM
    Did anyone see these videos?

    >>WPP: Exactly. Religion, in my opinion, is on its deathbed.<<

    Not sure if I agree with the idea that religion is going to be replaced by Gurdjieff. God forbid! If Gurdjieff groups became the dominant religion in the US then it would be just as bad as any other religion. I don't see the Christians giving up their control without a bloody fight either. But this is all pure speculation.

    Did Gurdjieff get his teaching from the walls of Egypts ancient temples? I doubt it.

    dc
    • The Gurdjieff Foundation is already acting like the 'religions' we have come to know and dread. For example the "REVISION' and "IMPROVEMENTS" that have been purpetrated on Gurdjieff's BEELZEBUB (english version)- the one He explicitly decreed for publishing- and hung around on earth until it was done (according to Him).
      • After reading a book on Kabbalah I was able to see the origins of the Enegram. It was a great realization even the shocks fit in perfectly with the "Tree of Life". G's way of expressing it is quite original and enjoyable. I wish I could remember the exact sequence to understanding and conveying this relationship between the two cosmologies; I have been busy in life pursuits and have lost my understand of the details to both! I love G's "way". Only a man of great creativity and genius could develop this synthesis of Kabala and esoteric knowledge. I believe he assembled it entirely from his own investigation and "insight". Wonder where that pre-sands Egypt map is anyways??????????????? Thanks for the video links would like to see them.
    • I have all the videos and am quite impressed. Patterson and his team did a great job.

      I wonder, though, why Patterson left the Gurdjieff Foundation. Anybody know about his split and his decision to "create" a new fourth way school with himself as "leader"?
      • Re: William Patrick Patterson on Gurdjieff video

        Mon, July 31, 2006 - 11:09 PM
        You would be surprised how the various factions of Gurdjieff Groups are so political and intolerant of one another. The Gurdjieff Foundation does not recognize Patterson's authority, nor his approach, and he is just as critical of them. I was involved with the foundation for 10 years and with Patterson's group for another 5, as well as a few others. Where did all this leave me?

        Long seeking it through others,
        I was far from reaching it.
        Now I go by myself;
        I meet it everywhere.
        It is just I myself,
        And I am not itself.
        Understanding this way,
        I can be as I am.

        ~ Tung-shan ~
        (806 - 869)

        Patterson prides himself on his ability to deliver "shocks" to his students. Gurdjieff is well known for his use of "shocks" to help students "see" themselves. He could sense when the student experienced an "ah-ha moment" and would proclaim: "ah, now you see." Unfortunately, Patterson only knows how to ineptly create the "shock," usually through public humiliation, and doesn't know how to follow up and allow the student to "see himself." He demands blind obedience and subjugation. His poor students only blame themselves and hope for another chance for humiliation, so they can maybe do better the next time. Gurdjieff was a rare individual with the ability see people to their core. Patterson, and the many other self-proclaimed Gurdjieff teachers (imitators), are all over and have many gullible students. Many of the groups are closer to being cults (in the negative sense) than religions.
        • Re: William Patrick Patterson on Gurdjieff video

          Tue, August 1, 2006 - 12:00 AM
          Scott,

          re: "Unfortunately, Patterson only knows how to ineptly create the "shock," usually through public humiliation, and doesn't know how to follow up and allow the student to "see himself." He demands blind obedience and subjugation. "


          This was not my experience of William Patrick Patterson at all. The shock I experienced did not feel not planned or intended by him; i felt and saw no manipulation on his part. It was nothing he did and I doubt he was even aware of my experience.

          It was more about how I became - in that moment while facing him -- suddenly more aware of my own limitations. This sudden awareness of my own limits was a shock. And for that, I remain grateful, as this does not happen very often with me. Again, I doubt he was aware of any effect he might have had on me because it was not him that effected me.

          I am not a follower of Patterson nor Gurdjieff and have not belonged to any Gurdjieff schools, either in theory or practice. My interest in the work of Gurdjieff emerged over twenty years ago after several individuals (who said they were from the Gurdjieff Foundation in New York). They assumed that I was a student of the Work after we had conversed at a gathering in Carmel, California where they were visiting. I was talking about my training as a mime artist and how the head, heart and gut centers motivated different characters for me. They said my ideas were from Gurdjieff and I said, "Gurdjieff who ?"
          • Re: William Patrick Patterson on Gurdjieff video

            Tue, August 1, 2006 - 9:27 AM
            Your experience is not unique. For you, at this time, your path may be to to find an outside "master" whom you feel has a high level of Being, or at least higher than your own. That was once my path, as well. However, after having spent many years in Patterson's groups, I have "graduated," so to speak (Patterson says you can never graduate from his groups, you just leave).

            BTW, you have to officially be a member of his groups before he uses the shock treatments. The public lectures are intended to sell books and videos and to attract fresh searchers, appealing to their dreams of enlightenment and spiritual growth. Remember, no one comes to the work for the "right" reasons.
            • Re: William Patrick Patterson on Gurdjieff video

              Tue, August 1, 2006 - 12:16 PM
              Scott,

              Thanks for your informative reply.

              Seeing as you have spent many years in William Patrick Patterson's groups, it is obvious to me that you and I are on different paths. In my life so far (I'm 53), I have never sought a master (nor has one sought me) and it's not likely that I ever will, nor have I been involved in any groups led by a 'master'. Though I personally know others who have found this path beneficial and useful, that calling has apparently fallen on deaf ears to me.

              Thanks, again, for your disclosures.
        • Re: William Patrick Patterson on Gurdjieff video

          Sat, January 27, 2007 - 6:03 PM
          You know, if Gurdjieff were to suddenly appear today, he would most likely banish all the self-proclaimed teachers that are running their own schools. He himself stated that his ideas would degenerate by the third generation following his death, which is where we are now. The only real choice for a seeker today is to study the books without "help" from those teachers. There is one support for the work that I think is a real help: the exercises that are in the workbook "Get Out of Your Mind & Into Your Life" by Steven C. Hayes.
  • If you read some of Patterson's books you may get a feeling for the possible reasoning. His approach is pretty rigid and orthodox, dismissing groups that don't hold completely "true" in his view to the Gurdjieffian teaching as he sees it anyway. Nobody who has not been in the direct "line" of Gurdjieff-taught students could possibly be legitimate and is therefore invalid. Also anybody who in any way alters what supposedly is the "teaching". And I thought that the Foundation was rigid.... Who knows....
    To me, what Gurdjieff was NOT trying to do is start another religion, or another orthodoxy. That is the opposite of what he was trying to do. Also, the "work" should not be a cult of personality around him. What is important is the teaching, which by definition is going to be interpreted and taught differently by every person who learns it. Simply because we have different nervous systems and minds, conciousnesses, etc. Nobody is going to understand, and then communicate the teaching the exact same way, regardless of their teaching lineage. Just my thought.
    • I had the opportunity to attend a lecture given by William Patrick Patterson a few years ago and I was impressed by the strong sense of presence and center in this man. It was not so much the content (the words) of his talk that reached me but the silences the words framed.

      This man's center was at home in silence. I approached him after the talk under the pretenses of thanking him. Though my gratitude was sincere, my intent was to openly experience his emanation and when I did, I received a little shock. OK, I said to myself, he's the real deal. And then, I left the building.

      My broef meeting with William Patrick Patterson demonstrated that it's not what a person knows that is of the greatest important but how the quality of their emanation acts on us.
    • Re: William Patrick Patterson on Gurdjieff video

      Sat, February 10, 2007 - 10:28 AM
      I agree with your post. You are very accurate in your conclusions. Patterson has zero tolerance for any approach not his own. He actually left the work early on and was greatly influenced by Sunyata and Jean Klein before returning to the work as a source of income.

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