Sunday, October 13, 2019
Devotee Autoethnography ::
Devotee Autoethnography Eyes closed on cherubic faces of holy devotion, chanting Hindu gibberish to wheezing harmoniums, clanging tambourines, untuned guitars, rattles, bells, sticks, and perhaps a vigorous but poorly-rehearsed set of tablasâ⬠¦ ââ¬Å"Sheââ¬â¢s a breather,â⬠they say, either in friendliness to jest, or patronizingly to criticize. And usually, not much evidence is revealed to complicate the minimized label. ââ¬Å"Well, basically, we get together, breathe, and then sing a little bit.â⬠This is usually the line into which I condense my participation in The Art of Livingââ¬âto cram it into a nut shell, and to present it as outsiders would be likely to perceive it if spying from a flyââ¬â¢s perch. My own introduction to this culture happened slowly, and not too long ago, so I still feel the tension of sliding into an unknown community as an outsider, and still experience hesitation describing the group to others for fear of bad reactions or scathing judgment. I think it has much to do with the big, bad g-word. When people, especially in independence-loving USA, hear the word ââ¬Å"guru,â⬠an oozing blanket of mistrust, disgust, and dismissal creeps up from the nether regions of media consciousness and visions of kool-aid, snake-dancers, and comet-chasers seem to choke the life of any words possibly to follow. The g-word however, when followedââ¬âas is inevitableââ¬âby the c-word, often shuts out the possibility of following words all together. As my mother would say, ââ¬Å"It smells like a cult to me.â⬠Despite my adamant denials that I could be involved with anything remotely resembling a cult, the first time I realized that I was definitely a part o f this culture had to do with the chilling consideration that a cult was exactly what this was and, somehow.â⬠¦I belonged to it. I had traveled from San Diego with a few members of my Art of Living family (as many grow accustomed to referring one another) to an ââ¬Å"advanced courseâ⬠in LA. Such a course is offered occasionally to graduates of the ââ¬Å"introductory courseâ⬠ââ¬âa six-day workshop of yoga postures, yogic breathing, and introspection. We knew not what to expect of this upcoming workshop, other than that it would be ââ¬Å"challenging.â⬠Perhaps our first taste of this manifested on the first evening, when we waded through seventy pairs of shoes piled at the entryway of a private house toward a living room crammed with the shoesââ¬â¢ owners. Devotee Autoethnography :: Devotee Autoethnography Eyes closed on cherubic faces of holy devotion, chanting Hindu gibberish to wheezing harmoniums, clanging tambourines, untuned guitars, rattles, bells, sticks, and perhaps a vigorous but poorly-rehearsed set of tablasâ⬠¦ ââ¬Å"Sheââ¬â¢s a breather,â⬠they say, either in friendliness to jest, or patronizingly to criticize. And usually, not much evidence is revealed to complicate the minimized label. ââ¬Å"Well, basically, we get together, breathe, and then sing a little bit.â⬠This is usually the line into which I condense my participation in The Art of Livingââ¬âto cram it into a nut shell, and to present it as outsiders would be likely to perceive it if spying from a flyââ¬â¢s perch. My own introduction to this culture happened slowly, and not too long ago, so I still feel the tension of sliding into an unknown community as an outsider, and still experience hesitation describing the group to others for fear of bad reactions or scathing judgment. I think it has much to do with the big, bad g-word. When people, especially in independence-loving USA, hear the word ââ¬Å"guru,â⬠an oozing blanket of mistrust, disgust, and dismissal creeps up from the nether regions of media consciousness and visions of kool-aid, snake-dancers, and comet-chasers seem to choke the life of any words possibly to follow. The g-word however, when followedââ¬âas is inevitableââ¬âby the c-word, often shuts out the possibility of following words all together. As my mother would say, ââ¬Å"It smells like a cult to me.â⬠Despite my adamant denials that I could be involved with anything remotely resembling a cult, the first time I realized that I was definitely a part o f this culture had to do with the chilling consideration that a cult was exactly what this was and, somehow.â⬠¦I belonged to it. I had traveled from San Diego with a few members of my Art of Living family (as many grow accustomed to referring one another) to an ââ¬Å"advanced courseâ⬠in LA. Such a course is offered occasionally to graduates of the ââ¬Å"introductory courseâ⬠ââ¬âa six-day workshop of yoga postures, yogic breathing, and introspection. We knew not what to expect of this upcoming workshop, other than that it would be ââ¬Å"challenging.â⬠Perhaps our first taste of this manifested on the first evening, when we waded through seventy pairs of shoes piled at the entryway of a private house toward a living room crammed with the shoesââ¬â¢ owners.
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