A Day With Ram Dass

“My guru told me ‘Be like Gandhi,’” Ram Dass told me once during an interview.  “Gandhi said, ‘My life is my message.’” The words came haltingly, short phrases followed by long pauses.  The former Dr. Richard Alpert, the once eloquent spiritual seeker and psychedelic rebel, sat in a wheelchair, hunting for words, often coming up with nothing except a soft “yea.”  “Before the stroke it was words, words, words,” he told me.  “After the stroke it was silence, silence, silence.”

Ram Dass spoke of before the stroke and after, about how things go in this world, often suddenly and unexpectedly. What stays, really? That meeting stays with me, so much silence, but full and warm, a sharing of presence. A real meeting. His assistant wrote me a note on his behalf afterwards that said he felt the same. Impossible to forget that generous gesture.

Ram Dass and I sat together near a window of a room in a hotel that was then called “the New York Marriott Financial Center,” a grand edifice of glass and steel that was a short and impressive stroll from the World Trade Center.  The hotel itself turned out to be a lesson in before and after.  About a year and a half after our meeting, much of that glass would be shattered, and when the hotel finally re-opened years later it was renamed the “New York Marriot Downtown.”  No more references to financial or trade centers. Those were different times.  The day I visited Ram Dass, there was a big bustling conference going on.  There were signs in the lobby saying something about “Asset-backed Commercial Paper.”

“Acid-backed paper?” said Ram Dass, when I described the scene. “What are we waiting for?  Let’s go!” He laughed, banging his hand on the arm of his wheelchair.  Just for a moment, if I squinted my eyes, he looked a little bit like the psychedelic crusader who had ingested at least three hundred bits of acid-backed paper over the years, before he went off to India to find a guru and learn to meditate.  He and the classic story of his journey Be Here Now had been iconic to me when I was young—proof that there was another way.  The formerly ambitious young assistant professor of psychology at Harvard took psilocybin mushrooms with Timothy Leary and glimpsed an abiding awareness, a witnessing “I.”  And from that time he sought not just know things but to “Know.”  And now here we were.

The formerly irrepressible, unstoppably eloquent Ram Dass sat and waited patiently for words to float up to the surface (or not) and this inspired patience in me.  There was nothing else to be done but just hang out and be. We sat together and watched ferries and tugboats criss-cross New York Harbor.  The famous seeker was there to attend a conference on dying organized by Buddhist scholar Robert Thurman, and I was there to interview him about his latest book.  But I couldn’t do my job the way it is usually done. I had to let go of my questions and just sit back and wait.  I remember the two of us watching the tugboats riding low in the choppy grey water.  And how comfortable it was being with him.

Once I thought of Ram Dass as a glamorous psychedelic outlaw turned spiritual seeker. I told him about reading Be Here Now  as a youngster and how I wanted to emulate him, traveling the India, meeting an amazing guru who could read innermost suffering and love, all of it. He told me in his halting way that he wished he had a nickel for everyone who said something similar, but kind of chuckling gently, as if we were in this together. We all have to learn that concepts are different from reality.

Sitting with him that day, I began to realize that what I was really seeking was a way to contact what he spoke and wrote about so often, a deeper awareness that sees and knows. we don’t have to go to great extremes because life will bring us extremes, and the awareness that knows may find us anywhere because it is already in us, waiting patiently.

Ram Dass told me a little about the stroke that hit one evening in 1997, as he lay in bed wondering how to improve a book he was writing about the wisdom potential of aging.  Over the months and years of his rehabilitation, wisdom came:  “We think life is like one of these buildings, big and solid,” said, gesturing at the hotel around us and out the window towards the towers.  “But age is like an earthquake.  Everything goes.”

But years later, those mighty skyscrapers are gone or vastly altered, and Ram Dass himself is still here.  The real irony was this, and it was wonderful. He was still here. More here. I shared with this famous seeker, this disciple of the Indian guru Neem Karoli Baba, some wisdom from my mother who suffered a stroke and recovered her vocabulary and other faculties, well beyond predictions:  “You tell Ram Dass not to listen to anybody tell him what he can’t do.  Tell him to just keep going because nobody knows what can happen.”

Ram Dass listened closely. He knew she knew something real. My mother never tripped or went to India.  She never lost her Nebraska accent, just added a layer of Northern New York, so that his name came out like Dodge Ram (and Dass like Ass).  But she understood the impermanent nature of life because she had lived through it.  She was a mother (and a daughter) and she knew that forces like love and compassion are stronger and more enduring than buildings. She had lived through enough to know what matters, what is real–she had faced death and the loss that comes with age.  Without ever putting it into words, she understood that reality is always different our thoughts and words about it, and that nobody can nail it down.  She probably would have agreed with Ram Dass that about the best we can do is accompany each other in this mystery, give each other the gift of our presence and attention.  I think she would have agreed with Ram Dass who said:  “We’re all just walking each other home.”

4 thoughts on “A Day With Ram Dass

  1. What a beautiful way to acknowledge Ram Dass and your mother and the wisdom of being comfortable with one another on the way. Thank you, Tracy. (as tears gather …)

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