This Mishlove interview of Ram Dass is my favorite 1 hour interview ever. If I were to be trapped on an island all by myself and could only have one hour of content I think this might be it.
I think this interview alone can save any human. Its like a lifeline for increasing your conscious. The amount of teaching points made is incredible and most of them play parts in all parts of life. This interview helps me feel sane in an insane world.
Jeff is fantastic right? I think both guys are totally on point in this amazing interview series. There is enough material here to think about the rest of your life, LOL, and expressed so well by both men. Jeff is really a great interviewer because his questions are solid, simple but rich, and he is an excellent listener who knows how to share his opinion without continually honoring the fact that his guest is to be featured. Not an easy task for a lot of interviewers and he pulls it off brilliantly.
This from the late 1980s, not 1995. Ram Dass said his father is 90 and was born in 1898, so that means it's 1988 or 1989, probably '89 because right before that Mishlove said "now we're moving into the (19)'90s".
I think its is quite the universal joke that we have been given a conscious that is limitless and can feel/receive the word of God, but only have the means to output the information and experience as rigid, crude, and imperfect sentences.
My question to him would be, would he harden his heart to the point of killing someone like Hitler to save so many others from suffering.. I totally get the “judge the action” mantra, but if the opportunity arose to save so many would you go beyond opposing the action and MAKE an opposing action of your own?
Then you should ask: Would that make the difference? Killing Hitler wouldn't have suppressed the sentiment in Germany in those times, and could've even amplified it, making him a martyr of some sorts. Anyway, of course this is al hypothetical, but coming back to the essence of your question: The crux is in the fact that opposing action almost always begs for an opposing reaction, thus generating new chains of opposing outcomes, that is potentially never ending. The only thing that could break these chains is the mentality of forgiveness. Why cause more bloodshed in answer to bloodshed? A simple concept, but of course incredibly hard in practice. In other words, easier to teach others in youtube comment sections, than it is to apply in one's own life..
what if somehow 'hippie movement' and/or '20th century', being only the assumed context in which some kind of talk just happened to take off, ain't necessarily to determine one's interest or lack of interest around it all? Can't some ideas and styles of expression still be well felt, across various millieu and centuries? idk.
Always come back to this interview, one of ram dass' and mishlove's best!
Yes . . . possibly some of the finest conversation on the internet- and certainly that I've ever seen
This Mishlove interview of Ram Dass is my favorite 1 hour interview ever. If I were to be trapped on an island all by myself and could only have one hour of content I think this might be it.
I think this interview alone can save any human. Its like a lifeline for increasing your conscious. The amount of teaching points made is incredible and most of them play parts in all parts of life. This interview helps me feel sane in an insane world.
This is such a beautiful interview. Learning a lot on this journey of walking each other home 💗✨
Ram Dass was one of the great ones. Intelligent and sharing. Sheer joy in listening to him or reading his books. A real giant.
world class content
i feel like this is a necessary watch for anyone who works in social work or mental health
A wonderful conversation.
Two of my favorite human incarnations 😊
Cor this is good. Jeff was on form even back then. I really think that RD knew stuff. thanks peacefulness baby
Jeff is fantastic right? I think both guys are totally on point in this amazing interview series. There is enough material here to think about the rest of your life, LOL, and expressed so well by both men. Jeff is really a great interviewer because his questions are solid, simple but rich, and he is an excellent listener who knows how to share his opinion without continually honoring the fact that his guest is to be featured. Not an easy task for a lot of interviewers and he pulls it off brilliantly.
@@john-carlosynostroza yes. you seem a bit alert yourself.
This from the late 1980s, not 1995. Ram Dass said his father is 90 and was born in 1898, so that means it's 1988 or 1989, probably '89 because right before that Mishlove said "now we're moving into the (19)'90s".
Would be nice if they put the year of the interview in the description.
Thank you for this 💚🙏☀️🙏💚
Amazing
I think its is quite the universal joke that we have been given a conscious that is limitless and can feel/receive the word of God, but only have the means to output the information and experience as rigid, crude, and imperfect sentences.
If you know you have more pants at home (which the pantless person probably does not have), then gladly give away your pants. Right?
🙏
I love Jeff
🧡
Must be from the late 80s not 95 based on the dialogue
My question to him would be, would he harden his heart to the point of killing someone like Hitler to save so many others from suffering.. I totally get the “judge the action” mantra, but if the opportunity arose to save so many would you go beyond opposing the action and MAKE an opposing action of your own?
Then you should ask: Would that make the difference? Killing Hitler wouldn't have suppressed the sentiment in Germany in those times, and could've even amplified it, making him a martyr of some sorts.
Anyway, of course this is al hypothetical, but coming back to the essence of your question: The crux is in the fact that opposing action almost always begs for an opposing reaction, thus generating new chains of opposing outcomes, that is potentially never ending. The only thing that could break these chains is the mentality of forgiveness. Why cause more bloodshed in answer to bloodshed?
A simple concept, but of course incredibly hard in practice. In other words, easier to teach others in youtube comment sections, than it is to apply in one's own life..
Hitler was a drugged up maniac but if you look at our leaders now they are killing many more than he ever did but barely anyone knows its happening.
w o w
Honestly, it was hard for me to revisit this kind of hippie speak. That is so 20th century.
Aw, stuff it
Good luck, bud😂 this sort of philosophical dialogue is more prevalent than ever (between the lines of our usual hostile/divisive bullshit, of course)
what if somehow 'hippie movement' and/or '20th century', being only the assumed context in which some kind of talk just happened to take off, ain't necessarily to determine one's interest or lack of interest around it all?
Can't some ideas and styles of expression still be well felt, across various millieu and centuries?
idk.
Stop being homophobic. Can't two gay men have a conversation? Sheesh.
@@AD-zg7fw lol