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A memoir of adversity, hope, and the value of the Gurdjieff Work James Opie’s spiritual autobiography is a story of continuous movement. Episodes of youthful right-wing politics, racism, and drug use move into resistance to the draft and Vietnam, and eventually connect with the teaching of G.I. Gurdjieff. Opie even enters the same line of work that the spiritual master maintained—becoming an Oriental rug dealer. There are travels to Iran and Afghanistan, and colorful characters as Opie plies his trade with distinction. Opie moves through several marriages and other personal turbulence.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A memoir of adversity, hope, and the value of the Gurdjieff Work James Opie’s spiritual autobiography is a story of continuous movement. Episodes of youthful right-wing politics, racism, and drug use move into resistance to the draft and Vietnam, and eventually connect with the teaching of G.I. Gurdjieff. Opie even enters the same line of work that the spiritual master maintained—becoming an Oriental rug dealer. There are travels to Iran and Afghanistan, and colorful characters as Opie plies his trade with distinction. Opie moves through several marriages and other personal turbulence. Fourteen years in a Gurdjieff center in Oregon come to an end in 1988 when Opie runs afoul of the motherly but overbearing leader of “The Farm.” But by then he has spoken with Madame Jeanne de Salzmann, Gurdjieff’s most devoted pupil who remained with him until his death in 1949 and for forty-one years worked to transmit his teaching and preserve the content and meaning of the Movements. Opie also learns directly from the leader of the Gurdjieff Work in North America, Lord Pentland. In the end, this memoir-with-Gurdjieff reveals how inner efforts and fortuitous help incrementally make a man more mature and serious, though still remaining a beginner.
Autorenporträt
James Opie graduated from a state university in 1962 and taught in a rural high school for two years before moving to Big Sur, where pot and LSD were readily available. By 1965, LSD “trips” so reoriented his life as to risk being homeless. Moving through this crisis, he discovered the spirituality of Gurdjieff and began to engage in “the Work.” After additional years as a public school teacher, he also began a lucrative Oriental rug business, and began to write. Opie has published several books on Oriental rugs and many articles in Parabola and other magazines. In 2002, he and Jacob Needleman founded The Gurdjieff Foundation of Oregon, where Opie served as president for ten years. During the pandemic, Opie left Oregon with his wife and moved to upstate New York where he continues to write and enjoy many in-person and virtual contacts, including ties in the Gurdjieff world.