Being Ram Dass

Ram Dass

Book - 2021

"Professor Richard Alpert's star fell fast. To the dismay of his wealthy Boston family, he got fired from Harvard over experimental use of psychedelics with his psychology students. In 1967, he traveled to India to lick his wounds and find himself. And he did, at Neem Karoli Baba's ashram, in a direct encounter with unconditional, unlimited divine love. He returned to America as Baba Ram Dass, countercultural activist for expanded human consciousness. As a spiritual guide, at the bedside of the dying, and as a stroke survivor, he has always been ahead of his time, pulling the world along behind him. The author of over a dozen books, he now shares for the very first time the full story of how his life of service intersected wi...th an era of profound cultural upheaval. From the details of his groundbreaking research in psychedelics to his bumpy path to becoming a spiritual icon, from his struggles with his sexual identity to what it was like to find out in his late 70s that he was a father and grandfather, Ram Dass traces the pivotal points of his life against the backdrop of a mind opened by drugs, and a heart opened by a guru. Ram Dass brought America yoga, the use of psychedelics in psychotherapy, and a revolution in how we relate to death and dying. He has opened the door to the most important and healthiest conversations about the heart and mind in our culture. With this book, he opens his heart and mind to us"--

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BIOGRAPHY/Ram Dass
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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
Boulder, Colorado : Sounds True 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Ram Dass (author)
Other Authors
Rameshwar Das (author)
Physical Description
xiv, 409 pages, 64 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781683646280
  • Foreword by Anne Lamott
  • Introduction
  • Part I: Learning and unlearning. Fired
  • and free
  • Power and love
  • Mind fields
  • Working on the railroad
  • Harvard Yard
  • Becoming no body
  • The Harvard Psilocybin Project
  • Acidification
  • Hotel Nirvana
  • Newton commune
  • The center does not hold
  • Millbrook morphs
  • East versus West
  • Mother
  • Part II: Pilgrim of the heart. Journey to the East
  • The mapmaker
  • Instant Yogi
  • Quick, get in the car
  • From Bindu to Ojas
  • A world tour
  • Power plays
  • Be here now
  • Part III: Service center. All doing time
  • Brooklyn detour
  • Dying project
  • How can I help?
  • It's only love
  • Looking inward, reaching out
  • Part IV: The wheel turns. The new old age
  • Stroked
  • Long road back
  • Marooned on Maui
  • Only son
  • Part V: Ocean view. Heart 2 heart
  • Maharaj-ji's Lila
  • Closer to home
  • The next chapter: Ram Dass: Here/not here.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A comprehensive memoir from a famous but humble spiritual seeker. Mention the name Ram Dass (1931-2019), and you're likely to hear three words: Be Here Now. However, there's much more to the man born Richard Alpert than his best-known book, as this posthumous memoir, co-written with Das, makes amply clear. Born just outside of Boston to an ambitious Jewish family, he quickly became a hungry spiritual seeker. He ran with fellow Harvard psychology professor Timothy Leary, and together they became pioneers in hallucinogenic research. As he explains, psilocybin and LSD, which were legal when he began his studies, were a means of exploring other planes of consciousness, a rationale that didn't keep him from getting fired for turning on an undergraduate student. One can imagine such a book by another author--say, Leary--as full of chest-puffing and war stories. Thankfully, on his road to enlightenment, Ram Dass also accumulated a good deal of humility. This comes across clearest in the sections that find him in India, where he became a disciple of the Hindu guru Maharaj-ji, who taught the young American pilgrim how to love and worship without using drugs--and gave him his new name, which means "servant of God." "Turning toward Eastern spirituality was not just my inner evolution but part of a major cultural shift," writes the author, who proves to be a steady guide to some heady events and trends, including the Harvard psychedelic tests, the communal living experiment in Millbrook, New York, the Human Be-In in Golden Gate Park, and the influx of Westerners flooding India in search of a higher state of being. Familiar names walk in, walk out, and often return: Allen Ginsberg, Aldous Huxley, Ken Kesey, and the members of the Grateful Dead. Ram Dass lived a full life and then some. His final statement is thorough and, yes, enlightening. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.