Suffering as Grace
An Interview with Ram Dass
Introduction by the editor of
The Sun (1990):
When
Cat Saundersa Seattle therapist and longtime admirer of Ram Dass
offered us this interview, I was skeptical. Did we need to publish yet
another conversation with the ex-Harvard professor turned holy man? His
message was familiar to Sun readers, perhaps too familiar.
Then
I sat down and read the pieceand was reminded why Ram Dasss
wisdom and humor and amazing candor make him unique; why, at a time of
political malaise and economic dislocation, we need to hear him again.
(Besides, the hot tub story was too good to keep to myself.)
Ram
Dass, who was born in 1931, was raised by a well-to-do New England family
as Richard Alpert. In the sixties, he became a professor of psychology
at Harvard, where he made the acquaintance of Timothy Leary, and began
experimenting with psychedelic drugs. After being fired from Harvard in
1963, they spent several years traveling around the country, giving lectures
on the potential of psychedelics for exploring inner realms of consciousness.
In 1967,
Alpert went to India in search of a guru. There he met Neem Karoli, an
Indian saint who gave him the name Ram Dass (which means "servant
of God"). Soon after his return, his book Be Here Now was
published; it became a kind of counter-cultural Bible, establishing him
as this countrys most popular native-born spiritual teacher.
Over
the years, in lecture tours and in other booksThe Only Dance
There Is, Journey of Awakening, Grist for the Mill, Miracle of Love, and
How Can I Help?-Ram Dass has refined his message, but the core of his
teaching remains the same: the universe is a seamless whole, and we share
a common consciousness. More telling, perhaps, is the distinctly social
character he lends this message. In 1979, he helped form Seva (which means
"service" in Sanskrit), an international relief organization.
Originally
created to combat blindness in Nepal, Sevas work now extends to
relief operations among Guatemalan refugees in southern Mexico and Native
Americans here in the states. Seva has also set up a national network
of local groups whose members view service as a path to spiritual transformation.
(For more information about Seva, see its entry in this Web sites
"Links to Friends and Favorites.")
Cat
Saunders spoke to Ram Dass at the start of his 1990 lecture tour for Sevacalled
"Here and Now in the Nineties"which took him to thirty-six
cities in the United States and Canada.
Cat: Is suffering a necessary part
of being in a physical body?
Ram Dass: When you take birth in a physical
bodyunless youre a Christ or a Krishnayou think its
real. And if you think its real, there will be suffering. From the
Buddhist point of view, we have five hindrances: lust and greed; hatred
and ill will; sloth and torpor; agitation; and doubt. Thats who
we are, so why is one surprised if theres suffering? But when you
look at it from the spiritual point of view, you see that suffering is
grace, a gift given in order to awaken you. Once you want to awaken, then
the meaning of suffering changes. You dont court it, but when it
comes down the pike, you work with it, because you see that its
a valuable vehicle.
The only
reason you suffer is because of the clinging of your mind. For example,
if you suffer because youre dying, its because you cling to
life. If you suffer because youre growing old, its because
you cling to youth. If you suffer because you dont have something,
its because you cling to a model of having it.
You can
look at some who are starving and see that theyre not suffering,
then you look at others who are starving and they are suffering.
What we call poverty in this culture is opulence in India. In India, people
with a given amount of money would be totally content, and here theyd
be miserable.
Expectations
create suffering. Once you understand that, every time you suffer, you
look to see where youre clinging, which expectation youre
holding onto. Gurdjieff says you have to have suffered in order to do
spiritual work, but unless you give up suffering you cant do spiritual
work. That means giving up your identification with suffering and starting
to see suffering as grace.
Once I
had to leave a Buddhist meditation retreat to go to a Seva board meeting.
My teacher said, "You shouldnt go. You should stay and continue
to practice." And here I was, going off to Seva to deal with all
the immediate suffering in Guatemala and Nepal. I said, "Id
better deal with concrete suffering. Its very hard for me to hear
the more profound issue of suffering because of the immediate suffering."
Some acts
of compassion liberate on one level, but not on every level. You can give
somebody food, but in a way that still traps them in their separateness.
Or you can give them food in a way that liberates them. Which you do depends
on where youre at.
Seva is
our attempt to see our service in the world in relation to the work on
ourselvesto become a purer instrument of service, so that the service
is coming from a place of nondualism. Its not us serving them, its
it serving itself. Those who are suffering and those who
are serving are the same. Its just family helping itself. By treating
people who are helpless or in pain as "them," you are being
divisive. You end up separating people through your kind act. You have
to work very hard on yourself not to do that.
Cat: Would you say a little more about
Seva?
Ram Dass: Well, Seva (pronounced "say-va")
is a Sanskrit word meaning "to serve." Were a group of
friends who came together eleven years ago to relieve some suffering in
the world. We wanted to use the experience as a vehicle for growing, both
spiritually and in terms of social consciousness. We also thought that
it would be fun. Seva has turned out to be all three.
We originally
took on projects for the eradication of preventable and curable blindness.
Nepal, a very poor country, was the first to invite us. During these past
eleven years, we have supported the Nepalese in building a complete infrastructure
for eye care; we do more than 30,000 eye operations each year. We do similar
work in India.
We tend
to take on projects as our hearts guide us. One of us went down to Central
America and got involved with Guatemala and with the Guatemalan refugees
in Mexico. We are dealing with issues of basic survival, helping them
rebuild an economy that has been shattered by violence. It involves seeds
and water and goats and so on. We were also drawn to work with the American
Indians, who have some tremendous health problems. Weve been helping
them with emergency health care and setting up clinics. Now weve
gone into work with the homeless.
Were
a hands-on agency. We collaborate with people who have hearts that resonate
with ours, and who have strong hands. We form family friendships with
them in these countries and then we all become collaborators in relieving
suffering.
The cause
of suffering is separateness, and the isolation that comes from separateness.
Any act I doeven a kind actthat increases your separateness
causes suffering. Take pity, for example. Pity keeps people at a distance:
"I pity her. I pity him." In a way, its, "How nice,
you pity them." But at another level, you increase their suffering
by increasing their isolation, their separateness. Youre always
dealing with many planes of reality, where what looks very kind at one
level isnt particularly kind at another level.
Cat: You work on your own suffering
as you work with others suffering?
Ram Dass: I work to extricate myself
from the root causes of suffering. If you are motivated out of fear and
youre caught in suffering, the way you act toward others conveys
that fear apart from what you want to convey. Youre transmitting
your fear and your suffering. You have to work very hard on yourself in
order to serve as a clear space for others, as a gift to others.
You dont
want to offer them, like Typhoid Mary, the poisons of your being. So you
work with others as a way of working on yourself, because working with
other people in villages or in business offices or wherever really brings
all your conflicts to the surface sooner or later. Working on yourself
through serving people makes you a purer instrument of service, which
you then offer back to them. The circle is complete.
Cat: Other than through meditation,
how can people become a purer instrument of service?
Ram Dass: At Seva we do circle sharing,
in which we go around the circle of the staff a number of times, just
to clear up anything among us, like the ways we try to con each other
or milk the drama for each other. We invite each other to be very straight.
Also, we take turns going out in the field; we each get the direct experience
of what its like to be with, say, a Mayan woman whose child has
vitamin deficiencies due to a drought that destroyed the crop.
We experience
the immensity of that suffering and try to expand our hearts to embrace
itnot to deny it, not to push it away, not to be glib about it,
not just to throw money at it. We feel our way into that person and then
do whatever it is that can be done. Its something you do from a
quiet enough place so that you hear its total impact, beyond whatever
quick-fix quality it may have.
Cat: Do you still get stuck in the
helping process?
Ram Dass: Sure, I get stuck. I get stuck
because I get impatient. I want it all done right away. I get stuck because
I get so overwhelmed by the immensity of the suffering that I fail to
cultivate a sense of quiet in myself; I fail to get balance from it.
I get stuck
because I have to deal with my own middle-class-ness, my own fears of
hunger and starvation. I get stuck because Im not willing to surrender
deeply enough to the process of just becoming service, rather than being
someone who serves. Thats a big one.
Cat: For people new to the idea of
service, what would be a good way for them to start participating?
Ram Dass: Theres no one formula
for touching another human being. But I think the myths of our culture,
the role models of culturewhich emphasize freedom in terms of the
individuals space and privacyhave impoverished us. While we
control our little domain, we dont have the emotional richness we
had when we were part of a family or a village or a community. In those
groups, there is a quality of caring or compassion in which peoples
hearts are opened by each others needs and beauties and sadness.
When we
separate generations and move old people down to Miami, and every couple
wants its own place to live, theres a cost thats not immediately
obvious. Its a cost to the heart. It would help if people recognize
that much of the alienation they feel is a result of their not
reaching out to other human beings.
Then, to,
we need to recognize the polarization thats occurring between the
haves and the have-nots. People are no longer going to sit
and wait for our altruism. We are in a very unstable position. We see
we need new kinds of myths and models about who we are and how we function.
Consider
the emerging recognition that we are part of an ecosystem, that we are
not independent of it. We cant just use the earth and exploit it.
It uses us as much as we use it. Until we redefine ourselves and move
from an egosystem to an ecosystem, we remain cut off from
the very healing that weand the universe around usneed.
If people
look right around them, in their neighborhoods, among their families,
they will see ways they can reach out. The people I know who volunteer
to work with AIDS patients or cancer patients or the homelessalmost
to a person, they tell me how much that work has enriched their lives.
I feel sad for a person who says, "Ill just take care of myself."
I think thats a hungry ghost realm.
Cat: What would you say is our biggest
obstacle in this area of service?
Ram Dass: Its the inertia.
People know in their hearts that they would like to reach out to another
human being and help. But they fear they dont have the skills, or
theyre paranoid that theyll be taken advantage of, or theyre
frightened that once it starts, they wont be able to stop. They
end up holding back.
Im
doing a book on this issue with Mirabai Bush, a companion volume to How
Can I Help? Just to reach into another persons life and make
an overture, youve got to overcome a certain inertia. Thats
the hardest obstacle, that initial inertia. Once youre into it,
once youve done it, it becomes much easier. The first time is a
little tricky. You might go in and look at a bulletin board in a laundromat,
and it might say something like, "Blind person needs somebody to
read to him."
Cat: What do you think is your own
best defense against burnout?
Ram Dass: I try to cultivate that place
in myself where nothing much is happening even though the action is ongoingfinding
the part of my awareness that isnt identified with the doer or the
actor, and letting the process just happen, through me and around me.
Im
working with a woman, for example, who has cancer. We hang out together.
She has tremendous denial and resistance and anger and fear. I rub her
feet or hold her hand and we talk or we are silent. Were just there
together. After a while its just two beings sharing space. Were
both being healed through the process. I dont at any time feel like
Im a "helper," or Im "serving" her. I
just feel this tremendous opportunity to be with another being. This orientation
serves to prevent burnout, because I come away from these meetings very
enriched.
Cat: The trick is to realize that
whether someone is riddled with cancer or not, all you have anyway is
just being together.
Ram Dass: Thats all you have, exactly.
Thats all you have with a Guatemalan widow or with the homeless
guy in the park in New York. Thats what I did in the parks in New
York. I just hung out with these people. If I was able to get a sleeping
bag, fine, and if not, I would just be with them. Just recognizing and
respecting another human and experiencing that connection is tremendous.
Cat:
One of my clients wanted me to ask you how you abide your own suffering.
Do you have any practical suggestions?
Ram Dass: Certain words help me, like
"appreciation" and "poignant." I appreciate my poignancy.
I mean, Im so human. My humanity always years and fears and doubts
and lusts and hopes. Its all kind of sweet at this point. These
arent very huge demons anymore. I think that my deepest suffering
stems from my separation from God. Im just very patient now.
All I can
do is quiet my mind and open my heart and be an instrument for the relief
of suffering. I dont know what else to do this lifetime. Whatever
will happen, will happen. I get as close into it as I can and I invite
my friends to bust me and to open me and to touch me. And I quiet through
meditation a lot.
When Im
quiet enough, I begin to see the tightness in parts of my body; I begin
to see the fears that are motivating certain neurotic patterns of behavior.
All I do is see them as poignant. Thats my humanity. I have a great
appreciation for my humanity.
Cat: Do you ever enjoy your suffering?
Ram Dass: Thats a tricky one. A
while ago, I had a kidney stone, which is very painful. But I was watching
my consciousness and I was fascinated by the pain, by what it was like
and how horrible it was and whether Id die from it. It all seemed
kind of interesting. And I was in bliss. I was enjoying the process. In
that sense, I was enjoying my pain and suffering.
It probably
sounds masochistic, though I didnt ask for it and I wasnt
inflicting it. But once I had it, I was working with it. I was delighted
to see how conscious I stayed in the midst of that, more than the doctors
and all the others who had to deal with my kidney stone.
Cat: Would you talk a little about
how therapy fits into the spiritual journey?
Ram Dass: The path that one takes spiritually
is colored by ones personality. Your attraction to a guru may signal
a desire for a father substitute. Why youre attracted to one method
and not another has psychological roots. And then, as you do your practices,
and they start to work, a lot of the neurotic patterns surface. Its
like cooking chicken soup, when the fat keeps rising to the surface and
you have to keep skimming it.
There are
times when the spiritual practice pushes psychological issues to the surface
and theyre ready for skimming, ready to be dealt with. And then,
often, its good to ask somebody who does what I call "body-and-fender
repair" to act as a reflector for you, to show you where youre
distorting your understanding of the situation. You need a fair judge
and a witness, an external witness, a "rent-a-witness." These
terms arent pejorative. "Body-and-fender repair" and "rent-a-witness"
are all ways of seeing the therapist as somebody useful within a limited
domain, and not as the Buddha, not as someone especially gifted or enlightened.
Even after
many years of psychoanalysis, after teaching psychology, working as a
therapist, after taking drugs for many years, being in India, being a
yogi, having a guru, meditating for eighteen or nineteen years nowas
far as I can see I havent gotten rid of one neurosis. Not one. The
only thing that has changed is that while before these neuroses were huge
monsters that possessed me, now theyre like little shmoos that I
invite over for tea. I say, "Oh, sexual perversity! Havent
seen you in weeks!" Theyre sort of my style now. When your
neuroses become your style, youve got it made.
Everybody
has a personality composed of neurotic patterns. Ive given up thinking
Ive got to go through the eye of the needle and become psychologically
sound. Im always going to be a mess! At bottom, its uninteresting
and unimportant. Thats part of the shift that occurs with spiritual
practice. As things become less important, they become more available
to change. In the early days, the context was so narrow for memy
personality was so real and I so closely identified with itthat
it was very hard to change. As the context broadens, theres less
energy invested in my personality, and it becomes easier to change.
Cat: What feels most challenging to
you these days in your personal life?
Ram Dass: For years I worked to maintain
my equanimity in the presence of suffering, putting myself in situations
where theres intense suffering, and learning to keep my heart open.
I let my heart break; I didnt push away intellectually. I stayed
with it. I was intent on cultivating that part of me which is even and
quiet in the presence of such suffering.
But then
my father died in the fall of 1988, and I didnt have to keep his
household together any longer. I was suddenly free to play in some new
way. I thought that I ought to do for pleasure what Id done for
suffering. For a Jewish boy from Boston, thats not easy. I moved
to California, I bought a hot tub, my stepmother left me her Mercedes-Benz.
So there
I was, with a hot tub and a beautiful house up in the hills. I invited
my longtime lover to live with me. And suddenly I was back into dope and
sex and rock-and-roll. Up until then, I always worked my butt off in service
eleven months of the year, and then I would take a quick vacation to Hawaii
for a few weeks. Then Id come back and "be good" again.
Id think, "Oh, Ram Dass, you serve so much. Youre so
good!" I decided I didnt want to compartmentalize these
parts of my life anymore, but rather I wanted to integrate them.
I really
scared myself! I tried to do it a little too violently. The hot tub was
about eight feet from my desk. So Id sit at my desk, and Id
look at the hot tub and Id think, "Why the hell am I sitting
at this desk, with telephone calls to make and prefaces to write and people
to deal with?" And then Id sit in the hot tub and Id
think, "I like my desk. Gee, I really love all the things at my desk,
you know, but Im busy having pleasure!"
I saw that
pleasure was like a bottomless well. I could keep doing it and doing it
and doing it. Even though it was kind of empty, it was also seductive.
All of a sudden, I had a hard time getting out of bed in the morning,
because Id been up so late the night before.
Finally,
in a meditation course, I realized that I didnt want to go on with
this experiment, because I was having to give up to many things I found
precious, too many things I do with others. I saw that before I could
do this pleasure experiment fully, Id have to let this other become
the priority for a while. I said, "Not now, I cant do it now."
I pulled back a little. I moved my desk to the other room. I changed it
all. Im living alone again.
The experiment
lasted three monthsto be picked up again later. I dont feel
Im finished with it. Things like this go on for years until we incorporate
them.
Another
priority for me concerns the relationship between the spiritual dimension
of my life and the worldly or social dimension of it. Theres a part
of me that yearns to get closer to God all the time, that yearns to withdraw
from the here and now. And then theres another part of me that loves
being in the world. Its a real feast for me. Because now, with the
degree of visibility and respect that Ive generated over the years,
I can pretty much do whatever I want. I can play the way I want. I have
all these opportunities.
Cat: Are you ever overwhelmed by that?
By the amount of visibility you have?
Ram Dass: If Im overwhelmed, its
me creating my overwhelm. I turn it off. I mean, there are a lot of times
when I dont pick up the phone but just listen to the answering machine.
You put as many filters between you Dan the world as you need, to keep
the balance going.
Cat: Is there anything you still struggle
with?
Ram Dass: A lot of things that were big
struggles for me arent so much anymore. Because of the peculiar
nature of my role in society, and the name Ram Dass, people have certain
expectations of me. I have to struggle because its very easy to
become what they want me to be. I can get "phony holy" very
easily. I have to be careful about it. I have to keep grounded all the
time. I surround myself with friends who bust me all the time, which is
important. They say, "Youre getting out of hand, youre
getting too arrogant." Theyre worth their weight in gold.
Cat: How has being famous affected
your spiritual journey?
Ram Dass: Im a big fish in a little
pond. My fame is within a very limited domain. Im irrelevant to
most of the world. So I can always move right out of that sphere and Im
irrelevant again, believe me. Most of the time Im irrelevant.
Cat: That surprises me, because Ive
followed your work and writing so closely. But when I mentioned to some
people that I was going to interview Ram Dass, they said, "Who?"
Ram Dass: Yeah, I know. I call up a place
and the secretary will say, "Whos calling?" "Ram
Dass." "Just a minute, Ron."
I was at
a party with Phil Donahue and a lot of other very well known people. I
walked up to Peter, Paul, and Mary, and they said, "Arent you
Ram Dass?" and I said, "Yeah." I was just honored to meet
them and they beat me to it. I was getting kind of cocky. I went over
to Phil Donahue and said, "Hello, my names Ram Dass,"
expecting something, you know. And he said, "Nice to meet you, Ron!"
That was great.
Fame is
just another thing to work on. You try to milk it, and then you see how
empty it is. If you keep feeding on that, you starve to death. If you
surround yourself with people who like you just because youre famous,
youre not fed at all. They want you in your symbolic sense, not
in your real sense. The people I hang out with most of the time couldnt
care less. Its irrelevant.
Cat: Do you call yourself Ram Dass,
Richard, Dick, or what?
Ram Dass: I dont call myself anything.
No, I dont have a name for myself. Dick is more of a kind of macho
person that I am only in certain very limited circumstances. Richard seems
to have pretty much gone with my fathers death. Only my familyand
Tim Learystill call me Richard. Ram Dass is kind of a cult name.
In this society now, I would like to mainstream myself more. Id
like to be more available to people who dont read Eastern philosophy
and didnt smoke dope.
I went
out to play golf and we were put with another twosome. They were real
golfers, and I didnt have the guts to say, "Hi, Im Ram
Dass." So I said, "Hi, Im Dick." Then it was, "Good
shot, Dick!" And Id say, "Thanks, Pete!" If Id
said I was Ram Dass, it would have been, "Uh, hello, howd you
say that name?" And then it would have been weird for the next eighteen
holes.
I tried
to change back to Richard Alpert but it didnt work. The publishers
wouldnt publish my books.
Cat: What do you do for fun?
Ram Dass: I play a lot of volleyball
at the Seva meetings. I got the award for The Most Improvement last year.
That was a lot of fun. The board meetings for Seva are a great deal of
fun. To me, fun is hanging out with people who are growing, and who are
really caring, and who are light and playful about it, and who have a
sense of humor.
Like our
"funny glasses" at the board meetings. If you use the word "serious"
at the board meeting, you have to put on the Groucho Marx glasses, so
that we wont take ourselves too seriously. Which is really interesting
if youre dealing with death and blindness and violence.
Cat: How do you pray?
Ram Dass: I talk to my guru. My basic
method is called "the grace of the guru." I hang out with him,
I sing to him, I talk to him, I swear at him. I see my whole life as something
hes giving me in order to bring me closer to him. So thats
my dialogue, my prayer. See, my gurus dead. Its like having
an imaginary playmate who has infinite wisdom, a cosmic giggle, a kind
of "no bullshit" stance. He has all these qualities. Anybody
can do this. You just pick a being that you can relate to.
When I
pray, I never ask for anything, because I dont even know why things
are the way they are. How could I ask for them to be different? I dont
see that my models of how it should be are very interesting, so the only
thing I ask is, "Help me understand better whats happening
so my actions will come out of more wisdom."
Cat: Do you ever long for anything?
Ram Dass: I dont long for anything.
My life is enough now; I feel such grace. I feel theres a quality
about me now that helps people when I meet them. And so I see beauty all
around me a lot. Im sure it could turn ugly and draggy and kind
of grotesque very easily. But Ill work with that when it happens.
I dont seem to have any great fear about that.
Once, I
found myself in a railway station in India where I had bad dysentery.
The train was going to be two days late. And I have little money. I was
sitting there barefoot, and I had to go to the toilet. The latrine had
overflowed and there was shit all over the floor. It was one of those
situations where I would have expected to be freaked or depressed, and
I wasnt. I feel that if I wasnt then, why should I expect
to be?
Cat: Are you ever lonely?
Ram Dass: Yes, Im lonely. But thats
okay. I tried to get rid of that by living with a lover, and then I realized
that wasnt the solution. Its all right to be lonely. Im
not lonely much of the time, but when I am, I just allow it to be. I just
sit and feel lonely.
Cat: Does anything ever scare you?
Ram Dass: The only thing that used to
scare me was losing my awareness, getting caught in fear or pain or desire.
Im scared of being so caught in an illusion that I draw other people
into the illusion. But over the years, I dont seem to get caught.
Faith is
getting stronger, and as the faith gets stronger, what scares me is less
and less, the fear starts to dissolve. There are immediate situations,
like when Im hang gliding, or when Im surfing and I get out
in waves that are a little too big, or when I used to fly my own plane.
Some fears are functional, you know!
Cat: Whats the most important
thing you learned from drugs?
Ram Dass: Well, not to call them "drugs,"
first of all. How about tools? At any rate, the psychedelics are one thing
and the opiates and their derivatives are something else entirely. Ive
learned a huge amount from psychedelics and I honor them.
Theres
no way that this culture, despite its effort to make me into a "good
guy"and I realize the crack problem in this societycan
get me to deny the fact that psychedelics changed my life. They opened
my vision, and as a result Ive been able to open a lot of other
peoples vision. Psychedelics revealed the possibility that I wasnt
who I thought I was. At the same time, they are subject to incredible
misuse, especially when theyre not approached sacramentally or consciously.
Its
better if you wait to become somebody before you try to become
nobody. Most kids use drugs before their egos are settled. Because
they use them prematurely, they lose their ground. They lose their ability
to earn a living or keep their act together.
Cat: Have you ever struggled with
addiction?
Ram Dass: Well, Ive struggled with
sexual addictionwith actions to gratify lust that didnt have
much love in them. Very impersonal sex and lots of it. That was an addiction.
I just figured it would wear out sooner or later, or get kind of irrelevant.
But Ive never struggled with other kinds of addiction.
There was
a time I got so deeply into grass, into smoking dope, that I felt I needed
it in order to be enough. But this didnt really qualify as an addiction
because it fell away very quickly. It lasted maybe six months. The sex
was over a period of maybe thirty years, so it probably qualifies as an
addiction.
Cat: What were you like when you were
seven?
Ram Dass: I was cute! Little blond curls
all over my head. I had hair. That was different! I went to the Worlds
Fair in 1939. I was eight then. I had pneumonia that year, and I remember
being in the oxygen tank and sticking my nose out a hole so I could breathe
real air. I remember playing a lot with toy cars on the oriental rugs
and using the borders of the rugs as roads. Brrrrrrrm, brrrrrrrmmmm!
I was a
"good" child." Its taken me years in therapy to work
with that. I think my power was already broken by then. Once, I had an
incredible primal experience, reliving a temper tantrum I had when I was
two, recalling how my mother overwhelmed me. My power was taken away.
So I was a good kid. I was happy then. My unhappiness really started around
puberty. Then I had a lot of unhappiness.
Cat: One of my friends wants to know
if you went to your junior prom.
Ram Dass: Was junior prom in high school
or college?
Cat: I think its in high school.
Ram Dass: I was at prep school, and I
was so miserably unhappy and neurotic I dont remember if they had
a junior prom.
Cat: What kind of prep school?
Ram Dass: Oh, just a nice Republican
rich school. It was the most unhappy period of my life. I think I didnt
go to the junior prom. I went to my senior prom. I did do that, in a tuxedo.
Cat: Are you a "regular guy"?
Ram Dass: Im not. Im pretty
weird, actually. Im bisexual, and thats not a regular guy.
As you get more famous, people deal with that in a different way. You
know, they dont want to put you down anymore, they want to stay
close to you. At the same time, you get the homophobia in a lot of different
ways, subtle ways. Its not by my choice. Its just the way
life worked out. But thats all changing, too.
Cat: Whats all changing?
Ram Dass: It seems less and less relevant.
It was very relevant to me because I came out of a culture where you had
to be a closet homosexual. I always had a fronta woman with whom
I was living, because I cold perform sexually with a womanthough
my attachments were to men. I lived two lives for maybe twenty, thirty
years.
Cat: Secretly?
Ram Dass: Secretly. I lived in two different
worlds. And then, I came out. I just stopped doing that. I started to
talk about it. And I started to get letters from all over the country
saying, "Thank you for being so honest, because its helping
me so much." So I said, "Okay, fine, Ill be more honest."
And I began to see that nobody cared!
After youve
spent all your life thinking, "If they knew..." and then you
find out that nobody cares, it changes the way you feel about yourself.
I became more relaxed. I dont care. My feelings about women are
changing all the time, too, so I dont feel I have to label myself.
Cat: Do you ever feel crazy?
Ram Dass: I kid about it a lot. I can
look at everything Im doing, my very way of looking at reality,
as a total psychosis that Im spreading. But in general I feel more
sane than I ever felt before, extraordinarily sane. Thats crazy.
Thats crazy!
Cat: Are you doing anything now you
want to tell other people about?
Ram Dass: Theres a metagame, of
which Seva is but one manifestation. And the metagame is like a league,
like a fellowship of people who feel compassion and are growing and have
humor. There are a whole lot of us. Sevas just one part of it. Im
trying to make that league more conscious, so that people who feel those
feelings will realize theyre part of a network.
Theres
so much evidence of the dark conspiracies in the world. You know, multinational
intrigue and international rivalries that exploit, for example, the people
in Central America. Im looking for ways to cultivate an awareness
of compassion, to encourage people to acknowledge their identity with
a reference group around this awareness. Not just around the Red Cross
or the Elks or the Moose, but in the broad sense, an almost secret, hidden
sense, without a members-only club. Youre not "in it,"
but you are it, in virtue of your understanding.
Cat: If you could change one thing
on the planet, what would you change?
Ram Dass: Id change a little bit
of the imbalance between compassion and greed. Just a little bit, to make
it more interesting. And thats what Im doing.
This interview
was originally published by The Sun (December 1990). Reprinted
with permission of the publisher. Feel free to print out a copy for your
personal use, but to reprint this interview online or in the print media,
please contact the publisher directly at www.thesunmagazine.org
or write to The Sun at 107 North Roberson, Chapel Hill,
NC 27516.
Cat Saunders, Ph.D., is a personal and professional consultant,
shamanic practitioner, and nonsectarian
minister. She is the author of Dr.
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