Gurdjieff and the Intelligence of the Moving Center

Bodies in movement

What is my relationship with my moving center, as Gurdjieff calls one’s physical body? Why does Gurdjieff say each center has its own brain? [See the last two blogs on feeling center and intellectual center.] My Relationship to Moving Center I’ve always thought of myself as a Man #1 primarily centered in my physical self. … Read more

Gurdjieff and Feeling Center

Showing natural emotion

What does Gurdjieff and the 4th Way have to offer when it comes to the feeling center? Gurdjieff presented the idea that, “Man is a three-brained being.” That each of our centers— moving, thinking and feeling, have their own intelligence. The problem is, we don’t recognize the truth of this. We don’t allow our centers … Read more

Thoughts about Gurdjieff’s Mentation

Gurdjieff uses the word “mentation” when referring to what he calls the intellectual or thinking center in man. When it comes to intellect, I’ve always had a bit of an inferiority complex. My sister was the brainy one, I had to struggle for my A’s in school. My relationship with the thinking center started early-on … Read more

Connecting to Gurdjieff’s Great Accumulator

OUSPENSKY AND SMALL ACCUMULATORS Before talking about Gurdjieff’s Great Accumulator, let’s review Ouspensky’s introduction to the Small Accumulators. The notion that we can collect and store energy in ourselves. To fill our small accumulators, we plug “leaks” – avoid gabbing, a certain tone of laughter, nervous gestures, spinning daydreams, etc. We each have our own … Read more

Mrs. Popoff, J.G. Bennett and the Practice of Ablutions

The practice of Ablutions

Mrs. Popoff introduced me to the practice of morning ablutions sometime around 1971. Living weekends at her home in Long Island, I worked to earn money towards the second Basic Course at Sherborne House in England and attended group meetings Monday evenings. Tuesday mornings I returned to school in New Jersey. Jack, my boyfriend, lived … Read more

Blending Feeling and Sensation in Fourth Way Practice

Blending Feeling with Sensation

I am speaking of blending an emotional feeling with a separate physical sensation. Recently, I have realized that I’ve never given real attention to nor fully practiced the art of blending. In fact, I kind of skipped over practicing blending as such. I practiced sensation in the early days until I could call it up … Read more

JGB’s Final Stage of Life as Poetry

In Dramatic Universe, Volume 3, Bennett speaks about the stages of life. Of particular interest is what he has to say about the final stage of life. He puts the notion of “retirement” on its head, recommending that during this stage, one “retires” to a less outwardly active life. Dedicating part of each day to … Read more

An Armenian, like Gurdjieff

Illustrates poem about a garden

Sometimes a “real person” is hidden behind the exterior. I’ve kind-of known David Kherdian, almost twenty years my senior, for thirty years. He and his wife, Nonny, are Armenian-Americans. That in itself lends a mystique, as Gurdjieff was half Armenian. David’s grandparents died in the Turkish massacre of Armenians way back when. That history still … Read more

Beelzebub’s New Tale

Illustration of a new character in Beelzebub's Tales

Gurdjieff’s magnum opus, All and Everything, Beelzebub’s Tales to His Grandson, is not about THAT Beelzebub or maybe it is. He is a fallen angel, after all. In any event, Gurdjieff loved to “bury the dog deeper.” So he created an allegory in long convoluted sentences with words that were concocted from languages that were foreign … Read more

Who is J.G. Bennett, G.I. Gurdjieff, and Claymont?

Who is J.G. Bennett, G.I. Gurdjieff, and what is Claymont? These names have loomed large my entire adult life. For most people they have not. So here goes: G.I. Gurdjieff was a Greek-Armenian mystic who brought the “wisdom of the East” to the West. Basically, he spent his youth searching for the answers to questions. … Read more