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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #76 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Mon 9 Aug 04 11:26
permalink #76 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Mon 9 Aug 04 11:26
Interesting the way my eyes (sometimes) see one word but I type something totally different and don't notice the difference until someone points it out. It also happens when I speak and, occasionally, I find myself saying the opposite of what I intended to say. Not sure why that mental glitch exists, but it's been there all my life and there are times it's put me into very "interesting" predicaments (to say the least)....especially, saying yes when I meant to say no ;-). The article quoted their monthly calendar saying, "We see it as an experiment in evolution itself, creating new forms of interacting, experiencing, and learning with each other." And given some of the stuff featured in its calendar there should be something of value for most ages. I found a link to its web-site at http://www.onetastesf.com/. Reading about its staff and looking at the enumeration of some of their accomplishments, I'd be surprised if there weren't other age groups in the mix besides 20 somethings and expect it will be interesting to a broader audience than you fear. According to the web-site, it's on Folsom St. and just opened 7-30 so it was as new as I suspected. I sure hope it flourishes and is around for a long time because I'd love to visit it and know it's going to be a while before I get over to the City again ;-).
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #77 of 100: Jon Lebkowsky (jonl) Mon 9 Aug 04 12:48
permalink #77 of 100: Jon Lebkowsky (jonl) Mon 9 Aug 04 12:48
Those of you who are reading this over the web and are not members of the WELL can ask questions and make comments - just send 'em to inkwell-hosts@well.com and we'll copy them into the conversation.
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permalink #78 of 100: Joy Lindsey-Mitchell (joyam) Tue 10 Aug 04 00:51
permalink #78 of 100: Joy Lindsey-Mitchell (joyam) Tue 10 Aug 04 00:51
You are right about the Tarot being sync'ed with the kaballah, Jay. From the horses mouth: "The Masters of Wisdom behind our work brought Tarot to the public in the thirteenth century. It was time to use another outer method for spiritual and occult training. The times had become sodark with superstition; and freedomwas so unheard of, that few human beings would dare to think freely out loud." So the tarot was brought to the world; and they called it "the game of man", under the disguise of a game...playing cards. Bobby, I refer to my misguided self interested motivations as those things that I think are good for me but often lack the whole are proper context to assess what is good for me. Right, I am not there all the time but more than I can easily belief. Once I use the experience to reassess my good, after the fact of a knotty outcome , I do much better in not needing to play out that experience and emotion and outcome again. At least in unawareness for shorter periods of time. I am glad that there is an entrepreneurial spirit to fullfill many visions of what is needed ,helpful, positive to experimentation about how to reform how one lives ones life given the universal need and mission to find ones spiritual home/ community /environment in which to accelerate and enrich new life expressions. New Age has ,however had its difficulties in the marketing of knowledge. The New Age Movement could provide the spring board and social/cultural connections for the next rennaissance. We arem progressive as the mind develops and consciouness fills it. I think building communities of mission and meaning is a huge current need among the progressives who seek new lives. It is important to have those around with whom it is possible to live and practice the highest of ones ideals. This is difficult in the superficial society which often mirrors a world more interested in style than substance. There is also the rude awakening that often my new life/ideas and practices do not meet with the approval of those who can relate better to the old Joy. The old community can be quite unhelpful, sometimes threatened,by a practicing aspirant. It is is an extended meaning of"living in the world but not of it". Jay, you mention something about a collision. Would you give us your context, description of the forces and nature of this collision?
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #79 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Wed 11 Aug 04 08:33
permalink #79 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Wed 11 Aug 04 08:33
Joy, Not sure what's happened to Jay. I know he mentioned major deadlines so maybe they have him sidetracked for the moment. You wrote: "Jay, you mention something about a collision. Would you give us your context, description of the forces and nature of this collision?" Since he hasn't been back to answer you question, I thought I'd make a stab at it. His web-site http://www.jaykinney.com is titled "Jay Kinney's Clinick of Cultural Collision" and on his home page he talks about a juxtaposition of links and value systems there that are apparently mutually exclusive. He adds, "According to the Doctor's philosophy of cultural collision, mental health in the diabolical here and now requires the ability to witness and digest jarring contradictions while maintaining personal equilibrium." Look around. We live in a world of contractions and extremes and there must be many mental collisions as we strive to make sense of them all internally. I think Jay was trying to point to the need to balance the various bits of contradictory cultural debris that make us who we are while still trying to maintain a core sense of self in the midst of today's ever morphing, commodified existence. The contradictions may be different person to person but each of us needs to find ways to accept them in ourselves while maintaining a sense of internal balance. Everywhere one looks there are contradictions and too many choices. How can/does one maintain their spiritual focus let alone sanity in such a mad, contradictory place? Isn't that the question we are all asking/teaching ourselves and each other at some levels all the time? Isn't that what you were addressing, yourself, when you spoke of the need for a community of people to support you where you are at in your spiritual life.
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #80 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Wed 11 Aug 04 10:18
permalink #80 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Wed 11 Aug 04 10:18
Again, Bobby, you said it as well as I could have, maybe better. ;-) I was away from the computer for yesterday afternoon and evening attending to tasks that couldn't be ignored any longer. Deadlines, yes. Alas, unpaying deadlines. Anyway, I'm back. As I recall, I came up with the Clinic of Cultural Collision long before all the talk about "Clash of Civilizations". It is partly a spin-off of a paper that I did for the futurist journal, Futures, back in 1995, called "Net Worth? Religion, Cyberspace and the Future." In that now marvelously dated piece I wondered about the future impact on devout believers of all the freely available transgressive material on the Web. I wrote: "For the time being at least, someone dialing into the Internet from a remote location in a traditional society, be it Montana or Malaysia, suddenly has immediate access to taboo material that would be almost impossible to find in their own locale. This has the potential to trigger spiritual crises in many individuals, causing anxiety, anger or despair. Moreover, the immediate and easily repeated access to addictive activities such as gambling, which are just beginning to appear on the Net, amy have a calamitous impact on some individuals. These developments in turn will likely provide added fuel to efforts to censor or control Net contents." This was, of course, written before the ubiquitous appearance of Internet cafés all over the third world and at a time before most social institutions (such as churches)- or even businesses - had web-sites in place. _Now_ we also get to worry about junk text messages sent to our cell phones... technology marches on!
>I grew up in a world where people only a few years older than me felt too uncomfortable to even announce a pregnancy without resorting to euphemisms. To underscore your point, the word pregnant (as used to refer to a woman with child) itself started out as a euphemism. On another subject altogether, I'm confused about the Tarot/Kabbalah thing -- when joyam says >You are right about the Tarot being sync'ed with the kaballah, Jay. she then goes on to quote something about the thirteenth century, but didn't Jay say the connection was invented by E. Levi in the nineteenth century? Maybe I'm reading joyam's post wrong, though.
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #82 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Wed 11 Aug 04 14:44
permalink #82 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Wed 11 Aug 04 14:44
fom, I wondered about that, too. The text that Joy quoted from was of a sort that I tend to think of as "traditional histories", i.e. unprovable claims of ancient origins made by various organizations as part of their romantic lore. Gurdjieff, Idris Shah, Madame Blavatsky, the Rosicrucians, you name 'em, all made such claims...almost as a literary device. I think such notions have to be taken with an enormous grain of salt - at least as far as literal history go. And often the lofty claims are merely a tactic to try and gain prestige for teachings whose value would stand well enough on its own without the historical claims. The Rosicrucians, for instance, seem to have been a mythic "virtual" order imagined out of whole cloth and put forth as "real" in 17th century manifestoes and tales. Almost a form of psy war, if you will, in an attempt to inject some new ideas into the culture. As time went on and people took the claims as genuine, some people began to call themselves Rosicrucians, but they were later "me too's" with no connection to what was originally a concocted myth to begin with. This was later embroidered upon by groups like AMORC who claimed that everyone from Ben Franklin to the ancient Egyptian pharoahs were Rosicrucians. From what I know of AMORC's actual teachings (lessons) they are a decent presentation of Western occult ideas, but the "traditional history" is, again, unnecessary frosting on the cake. IMHO, of course...
Hmmm. "Imagined out of whole cloth" might also be explained as "revealed through visions," no? I'm thinking ot Tibetan Buddhism, which has something called ter (pronounced, roughly, tair) or terma, treasures allegedly hidden by Padmasambhava in the ninth century. (I may be a bit off on the details here; sorry.) A person who discovers these is called a terton. Some of the terma are real objects, like a crystal hidden within a cave, and some are histories; a visionary terton discovers (or "discovers") them through visions, and they're then regarded as history that's as real as the written-down-at-the-time kind. Anyway...I go back and forth on this. I'm also reminded of a local story about the Kashaya Pomo, who had lost their dances and boarded up their roundhouse until an ordinary member of the tribe, a middle-aged guy with various problems, suddenly began to have visionary dreams about dances and ceremonies. He started writing them down and eventually hunted out a few very old elders who might remember the real-life dances and ceremonies, and it turned out that his dreams were extremely accurate. They ended up rebuilding the roundhouse and starting the ceremonial cycle again, and the guy who'd had the dreams became a respected leader. See also: Jungian-esque explanations about archetypes and collective consciousness.
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #84 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Wed 11 Aug 04 19:48
permalink #84 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Wed 11 Aug 04 19:48
>"Imagined out of whole cloth" might also be explained as "revealed >through visions," no? Well, it *might* be the same... but I think that's something else again. I was talking about historical claims put forth as true with no actual evidence or attested point of discovery. The terma are either "real objects" as you say or visions. What I'm talking about are just historical assertions, without object or vision. But they *all* might have some explanation as archetypes... <g>
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #85 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Wed 11 Aug 04 20:04
permalink #85 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Wed 11 Aug 04 20:04
Jay wrote; "See also: Jungian-esque explanations about archetypes and collective consciousness." No fair, reading my mind that way ;-) or did it come to you in a dream? Most of the day, I've been thinking about asking you about Jung and his relationship to various traditions and see if you'd sketch some of that out for us. Then, at my first chance to log on, what do I find but you mentioning the very subject I'd been thinking about. Anyway, how about giving us an understanding of Jung and his work's relationship(s?) to some of the hidden Western traditions that are the focus of your book?
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #86 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Wed 11 Aug 04 22:09
permalink #86 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Wed 11 Aug 04 22:09
Bobby, That was actually fom's remark about "Jungian-esque explanations" but I did echo it. But no matter who brought Jung up, he is definitely relevant. I view Jung as a key figure in bringing the inner traditions of the West into the 20th century and reframing them in a way that helped make them relevant to us today. Prior to the 20th century, most of what we now consider "psychology" was subsumed within religious discourse or within fringe experimental practices such as Mesmerism. Freud and Jung helped establish a set of concepts and a language for speaking about human motivations, feelings, and behavior that could exist apart from strictly moralistic judgments. Freud drew upon Greek myths to describe his theories (e.g. the Oedipus complex), and Jung expanded upon this bridging to the past to draw upon Gnostic, alchemical, and Christian symbols and myths to discuss his insights into the human psyche. I found Jung's writings (and those of the Jungian analysts, Edward Edinger and June Singer) to be valuable entrance points into rediscovering and re-appreciating the Western inner traditions.
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #87 of 100: Joy Lindsey-Mitchell (joyam) Thu 12 Aug 04 03:24
permalink #87 of 100: Joy Lindsey-Mitchell (joyam) Thu 12 Aug 04 03:24
What I was acknowledging is that the Tarot system was later created as a way to teach the principles of the Kabalah. When I say from the horses mouth that is my current belief, which of course is outside your crucible of verified or verifiable history. I nor my mentors interest is in drawing praise for intellect or coziness with God. We did not invent the internet! My point is that whoever lays claim to inventing the Tarot, the only system that is authentic, came out of the teaching of the Kabalah. Jay I see the collision not just in terms of East/West traditions or the old world cultures that clash with modernity. I see this same collision in every country and of course most clearly here in the homeland. The conflict is innernational,not just international. What do you see about the cultural collisions here?
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #88 of 100: Joy Lindsey-Mitchell (joyam) Thu 12 Aug 04 03:30
permalink #88 of 100: Joy Lindsey-Mitchell (joyam) Thu 12 Aug 04 03:30
I see the divide more clearly as a divide or collision between the old human consciousness and those who find its precepts woefully lacking as a guide for real world decisions. It reads like the beginnings of stepping up to the next higher rung of consciousness in the next renaisance of mental and spiritual development.
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #89 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Thu 12 Aug 04 07:39
permalink #89 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Thu 12 Aug 04 07:39
Jay, thanks for mentioning June Singer. I just googled on her name and came up with an interview that I think our readers might really appreciate at http://www.intuition.org/txt/singer.htm
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #90 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Thu 12 Aug 04 23:35
permalink #90 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Thu 12 Aug 04 23:35
Joy, Those who look for divisions will always find them for material reality itself is based on separation and disconnection. Awareness of that primordial separation and the pain it brings because we are all incomplete/disconnected can be the beginning of wisdom Understanding that which makes us one is at the core of that wisdom and the search inside ourselves for that understanding is a path that can lead to the divine. There are more and more of us seeking to understand and, perhaps, that search will lead us one more step towards that renaissance you dream of.
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #91 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Thu 12 Aug 04 23:43
permalink #91 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Thu 12 Aug 04 23:43
Joy wrote: "I see the collision not just in terms of East/West traditions or the old world cultures that clash with modernity. I see this same collision in every country and of course most clearly here in the homeland. The conflict is innernational,not just international. What do you see about the cultural collisions here?" There are bound to be collisions everywhere and in any era. The ones I was referring to on my web-site were those specifically triggered by the Internet. Obviously, there are also cultural collisions within 21st century America, where you have large conflicting subcultures that operate from contradictory belief systems. My interest is not so much in seeing one side win over the other or in making those differences go away. I think human diversity is crucial and valuable. I would like, however, to find a way to enable people with wildly diverging worldviews to live side by side and not feel obliged to kill each other. That's a real challenge and one worth solving.
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permalink #92 of 100: Joy Lindsey-Mitchell (joyam) Fri 13 Aug 04 01:11
permalink #92 of 100: Joy Lindsey-Mitchell (joyam) Fri 13 Aug 04 01:11
I see no way to accomplish such an extensive healing here except as one gains wisdom and understanding of the divisions. I see no short cuts. To go forward refusing to acknowledge the difficulty of a Democracy with two non integratable sets of principles is to seek compromise between thought systems that lead to two very different views of reality, public policies, priorities, values and actions. It is not that I want to experience the difficulties and outcomes from such a divide, it is in my face everyday. There may be common ground in this divide, but I see no national process for that at all. I am afraid that it is a question of overcoming the fundamentalists in certainly other ways than violence. Fundamentalist do not compromise. They seek to control upon higher authority than humanity.
someone from another country and i were talking and when i came to mention america's ethnic diversity they summed it up in one word: salad. i like that. step up to the salad bar. of course it's the imperative of our time. <jay>, before you leave us for your nonpaying deadlines and all, i wonder have we covered *your* particular inner traditions, as practiced. that is, given your extensive, comprehensive, lucid map of the variety of traditions and techne, in the book(s) -- of them, on which path(s) do your feet tread ? what went into making your choices? why one and not another? (i won't ask the prufrock question: ' has it been worthwhile ') this has been a genuinely illuminating convivia with you, for which I'm very deeply and sincerely grateful
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permalink #94 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Fri 13 Aug 04 12:51
permalink #94 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Fri 13 Aug 04 12:51
gary, My own paths have included a modern-day approach to Gnosticism and work with Sufism (via friends in Turkey and a local Ibn 'Arabi studygroup). I've also been heavily involved for the past few years with Freemasonry, which has some esoteric and spiritual aspects, although those aspects mostly depend on one's own self-guided study. My choices of these things and not others were largely due to happenstance and "chance" running into people or groups. Of course they weren't really chance, for like attracts like. As for my earliest introduction to esoteric matters and interest in them, we can blame Stan Lee and Steve Ditko's "Dr. Strange" in the old Marvel comics in the 60s. <g> I'm happy to hear that you've enjoyed the discussions here. So have I. My thanks to Bobby, Jon, and the whole Well crew. And thanks to those of you who've participated.
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #95 of 100: Jon Lebkowsky (jonl) Sat 14 Aug 04 21:31
permalink #95 of 100: Jon Lebkowsky (jonl) Sat 14 Aug 04 21:31
Thanks especially to you, Jay, and to Bobby! This conversation was scheduled through yesterday, Friday the 13th, but the next conversation is delayed until Monday so we didn't say goodbye quite yet. This has been a wonderful conversation, and you can feel free to continue as time permits, even though we reached the official end date. That's never set in stone.
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permalink #96 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Sun 15 Aug 04 00:03
permalink #96 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Sun 15 Aug 04 00:03
Bobby and I had the chance to meet up in person today, wandering around Bernal Heights looking at the neighborhood garage sales. I resisted the chance to purchase Annie Sprinkle's used underwear. Only in San Francisco. I'll be happy to field any more questions, though I may not see them until Sunday afternoon. ;-)
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permalink #97 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Sun 15 Aug 04 20:13
permalink #97 of 100: Bobby Lilly (bobbyl) Sun 15 Aug 04 20:13
Jonl, I have to laugh, because, given this extended opportunity to post, the only thing I could think of to write about just now is how grateful I feel. I really want to thank you for your tireless blogging efforts which have pointed me to many thought-provoking links over the years, including the John Smiley interview which in turn, led to a very "interesting" two week experience here with Jon. It must have been synchronicity at work, once again, in my life ;-). Jay, Thank you for your book. It's given me much to think about over these next months and has helped me move toward a better understanding of the search for spiritual truth here in the West. I appreciated the opportunity to explore the many paths that are part of our heritege. No matter what path I looked at, I found universal truths there for the learning, if one is ready to learn. I have you to thank for pointing me in this direction as well as this time together on line and, to think, I owe it all to your "male" intuition ;-). Hearing what intuition is trying to say, let alone daring to trust it enough to follow where it leads, is a lesson that can take many years to learn. Thank you for trusting yours when you asked me to join you here. Had a great time yesterday walking and talking and finding some fantastic bargains in Bernal Heights. Now I understand WHY it's considered the best garage sale in the city.
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permalink #98 of 100: Jon Lebkowsky (jonl) Thu 19 Aug 04 11:30
permalink #98 of 100: Jon Lebkowsky (jonl) Thu 19 Aug 04 11:30
Neither one of you bought a garage?
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permalink #99 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Tue 24 Aug 04 23:18
permalink #99 of 100: Jay Kinney (jay-kinney) Tue 24 Aug 04 23:18
I sure wish I could buy a garage in my own neighborhood. I've had to park my car on the street in a different spot every time I come back from using it, for the last 28 years. Sometimes twice a day. In San Francisco. Luckily, the Hail Mary parking prayer works fairly well... I just stopped back by, on a whim, to see if anything further was posted in this topic...and there was Bobby's thank you note, which I'd not seen before. We'll have to do this again sometime! ;-)
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Jay Kinney, _The Inner West_
permalink #100 of 100: Jon Lebkowsky (jonl) Thu 26 Aug 04 14:17
permalink #100 of 100: Jon Lebkowsky (jonl) Thu 26 Aug 04 14:17
Incentive to write another book!
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