Search
Enter Keywords:
Tuesday, 06 January 2009
home arrow news arrow mystic tour 2006
mystic tour 2006
 

Happy New Year! PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 04 January 2007
xmas 2006"Es ist auch mir gewiss, dass wir in der Ordnung bleiben muessen, dass es den Austritt aus der Gesellschaft nicht gibt und wir uns aneinander pruefen muessen. Innerhalb der Grenzen aber haben wir den Blick gerichtet auf das Vollkommene, das Unmoegliche, Unerreichbare, sei es der Liebe, der Freiheit oder jenen reinen Groesse. Im Widerspiel des Unmoeglichen mit dem Moeglichen erweitern wir unsere Moeglichkeiten. Dass wir es erzeugen, dieses Spannungsverhaeltnis, an dem wir wachsen, darauf, meine ich, kommt es an; dass wir uns orientieren an einem Ziel, dass freilich, wenn wir uns naehern, sich noch einmal entfernt."

"I, too, am aware that we have to stay within the order, that there is no exit from society, and that we have to prove ourselves against one another. Within these limitations, though, we have our sight set on the perfect, the impossible, the unreachable, be it love, freedom, or any other pure concept. In the interplay between the impossible with the possible we increase our possibilities. That we create this relationship of tension through which we grow, that, I think, is the important part; that we orient ourselves on a goal, which, as we come closer, removes itself further from our grasp."
- Ingeborg Bachmann
Birthing of a new age... PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 07 November 2006

Hawaii SunsetWow... I had no idea... For years I was trying to understand why people take vacations. Hadn't really had one myself in my adult life so far. Just went on my first one, the first week without a computer in tow in probably a decade (and I did have 1000 emails waiting for me upon my return). How awesome, amazing and fun was that! Will definitely have to do this again. Spent an amazing week in Hawaii on the Big Island, away from the tourist stuff. Rented a lovely home there (view from the deck at sunset to the right) and spent most of the time driving around the island, dancing on volcanoes, and snorkeling (which I never understood before either). Really a fantastic voyage.
The main reason for my vacation was to celebrate the beginning of a new year of my life with all kinds of interesting things to look forward to. Decided that I should take next year off from consulting and told my pimp that I did not want any tricks for 2007. Instead, I will finally get back to my thesis (now close to a year overdue), will start marketing Six Sigma for Your Life and we have some lovely gigs planned with c3. Among other things we are planning a monthly lecture series to be filmed and turned into documentaries on the transformational power of art and media. Should be fun, and it's all about using the alchemical power of art to create new paradigms for this ailing world we live in. Just read a lovely quote by Gloria Steinem: "It is more rewarding to watch money change the world than watch it accumulate."

Many people I know suffer from the strange dualism that while on the one hand they would love to have money, on the other they have very low opinions of people with money. Based on how psychology and this universe seem to operate, consequently they are not attaining any riches. Always thought that the more money can be made with art, the more can be turned into more art. So, next year, I guess, will be about just that for me. Look forward to playing in this new paradigm and will keep you posted on adventures ;-)

Read more...
Gotta love the crazy ones... PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 18 September 2006

"Here’s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The trouble-makers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently. They’re not fond of rules, and they have no respect for the status-quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify, or vilify them. But the only thing you can’t do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do." - Apple Commercial

barrygoldberg.biz - cupcakeAlways loved this commercial and have quoted it a lot. Could not agree more. For me, artists are the drivers of transformation, messengers of the gods. They tap into new paradigms, and, confronted with the dualism between that understanding and the world around them, suggest new visions, create new ideas, tell new stories. Found this quote the other day when I joined YAOC (Yet Another Online Community). This one is called zaadz (from Dutch seeds). After MySpace (which I joined 2 years ago and which by now appears to be crazy popular - guess I should check it out again some time - or maybe not), tribe.net (which I really enjoyed - seemed like there were a lot of really cool people on there - definitely will check back there again when I have time), a whole array of business related ones (LinkedIn, OpenBC, ...), invitations to new more world-changing ones (Pathworks or something?), this is now yet another online community I decided I could belong to. Not sure if I will spend much time there, but hey, we shall see...

In the meantime, I will continue to hang with some of my crazy artist friends, the ones I know and love in person. Went to a wonderful art opening for my friend Barry Goldberg the other day (it's his cupcake above). His show is called "Songs in the Everyday". Bought several of his pieces which are now delighting on my walls, but even more so I really love his ideas on art. He originally has a music engineering and production background (with a very ecclectic collection of artists ranging from Fleetwood Mac to Dr. Dre and Marylin Manson). Consequently, he walks around with his own soundtrack and transforms that into his visions for photography. The way he put it (much more eloquently): "it's an exhibition of my evolving interest in synesthesia. I use found objects, landscapes and abstract imagery as instruments, inviting viewers to tune into their personal internal soundscapes and soundtracks. Partly because I come from a music background, I find myself living in a song. As I'm walking down the street, for instance, all the sounds of life — construction sounds, traffic, conversations — become harmonious, rhythmic and integrated. I'm interested in changing people's perspectives about what they see and hear in their everyday lives." - Lovely, ey?

Anyway, lots more coming soon. Finally moved into my new place! So excited. Quite a change after two years on the road. Books, Whiteboard, Art on the wall, and I even bought a bed (did splurge and got a king size futon - after all those nights in lovely big hotel beds and sleeping on the floor it seemed like a good way to go). Well, more about that when I had time to take some pictures. In general, I am planning to add a photo gallery to this site. People have asked me for pictures from my trip and also from LA (Iyanar, if you read this, they are coming!). So stay tuned and keep smiling ;-)


Home is where the hea(r)t is... PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 26 July 2006
I woke up in India to the scent of flowers and the sound of birds and bees (and frogs, geckos, lions and bears oh my)... I fell asleep - after being welcomed back by toxic cinamon sweetness in the air at LAX, record heat weather, and a beautiful sunset - to the sound of a helicopter humming above in the LA skies...
Came home from the airport and changed right back into my Indian wear to deal with the heat, and so I am sitting here now in Lungi and Mexican shirt, already had French, Italian food and Sushi, listening to my ipod with music collected over the last 6 months from British punk and AfroCuban funk to Indian and Voodoo sacred music, and feel comfort amidst the culture sludge ;-)
It was strange coming home to know that I am planning to stay for a while (of course one never knows). The diversity helps. Also lots going on here. I think I will like living in LA for a bit... Look forward to having my books up on a shelf again (it's been two years since I packed them in boxes and they have lived in darkness in a garage since, poor things), white boards and art hanging on the other walls... the many exciting projects that are already waiting in this pregnant universe ;-)
For now, it's rest a bit and digest the last two years of traveling...



The Simple Life PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 13 July 2006
Back in India for a few weeks... my first vacation of my adult life (outside of long weekends). Quite an interesting experience. Am visiting my cousin in Auroville. She is here working on some projects helping to reforest India, educating villages and schools on everything from composting to organic farming and medicinal herb planting. Really lovely project and some truly wonderful people.
Life in the forest is quite different from the traveling I have done in the last months: showering from a bucket of cold water, living without toilet paper, but instead with ants, roaches, geckos, frogs, butterflies (and all kinds of other creepy crawlers); sleeping underneath a mosquito net (and getting bit anyway - good thing it's a low risk Malaria area), eating rice and sambar for lunch every day, and still being able to hook up my computer (which I had originally not planned on even bringing) to a high-speed connection... Consequently, it's not as much of a vacation as it could have been, although at least I have been doing Yoga nearly every morning - when I was in Chennai, I met my Yoga teacher from LA who happened to be here for a certification process with the Krishnamacharja Yoga Mandiram. Quite inspiring. Saw Krishnamacharja's son TKV Desikachar speak the other day. Yoga is such an amazing science...
India is definitely a spiritually mind-bending place even though it seems most people here too are more religious than spiritual. Am also planning on visiting the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in the next days, the Krishnamurti center and the Theosophical Society Headquarter in Chennai. Still finishing a second reading of Huxley's "Perennial Philosophy", reading a book on the Practice of the Integral Yoga, and just reread Hesse's Siddartha, which always leaves me elated... We will see how all this will settle by the time I come back to LA. Really curious how this active reprogramming of my mind I have been doing here will manifest going forward. So far, I have been feeling calm, peaceful, and joyous ;-)
Am working slowly through the many emails in my inbox marked for follow up (in case you are waiting for an answer from me... mea culpa), and am helping the project by building a website for them. Regardless I have been able to ignore some of the other things I should be doing and letting things sit until I return to LA (which will already be next week - time is running much faster in India than in any other place I have been).
As of August it's back to lovely LALALand. Am in the process of looking for a new place and already have a new project waiting for me. Look forward to eating Sushi again and being around my lovely friends there. Am already planning some more traveling for later this year, but for now I look forward to being "home" for a while ;-)
Half around the world PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 12 June 2006
In the forest in India
Quite a trip it has been. From the first impressions of India, to more insights into that lovely country, to thinking about being there for a while, I flew back to LA last week, had a magnificient time there, reconnecting with some wonderful friends and evaluating some more interesting projects.
Everything always stays in the flow. Heraclit already said that we do not step into the same river twice, and it seems that this river has picked up speed along the path...
The picture above is from my visit to Auroville. My cousin is there at the moment working on a variety of projects that help Indian villages to establish self-sustainability (using water filtration, organic farming, reforesting, medicine herb gardens, etc.). It was quite fascinating to get an insight into her life there, and I really enjoyed the idea of working on projects again that actually help humanity. We will see, met some interesting people in India (having been in a vortex of synchronicities lately), so there might just be more happening in that arena soon...
Initially, I thought, I might be in India until the end of the year. Now it looks more like I will be there for a few weeks and then return to LA for a couple more interesting and fun projects.
Am in Manchester right now (the beautiful view from my hotel room window below), will be here for a couple of weeks and then it's either on to India or to Germany. We shall see. Lots of options that will clarify over the next days I hope.


I wish I was a poet... PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 23 May 2006
.... maybe then I would have the words to describe the sensory input I have experienced in the course of the last week and a half... I have heard it said that every place has its own sensory set, its own colors, sounds, smells, tastes, feel... India seems to have all of them: Brown dust on the ground is offset by loud colors be it of plastic products hanging in openings resembling stores or of women's magnificient sari's; beeping horns, Indian elevator music, the sound of a diesel motor grinding sugar cane dripping its sweet juices into plastic cups washed in a bucket of water that is as brown as the ground; the scent of delightful incense mingling with the scent of jasmine woven into women's hair immediately followed by the smell of an open sewer running by the side of the street and the pile of possibly human shit at my feet. It seems impossible to walk in a straight line. The sidewalks are crooked, interrupted by hanging powerlines, plastic wrappings, an unfortunate sign of Westernization, lying there discarded with the same laissez-faire as banana peels that would not be there in another thousand years. Bananas... Never had one before I came here, I think. The green things they sell in super markets in the west seem if at all a remote cousin of the fruit I have had the pleasure of tasting here. The food in general has been most amazing. Every bite put into my mouth so far has been an explosion of flavors, tasting totally different by the time it is swallowed, in between jumping through a range of suprises, delights, tickles...
For the whole first week I was here I could not have taken a picture if I had wanted to. It was as if the sights had blinded my eyes and brain like film exposed to sunlight. Even now, I cannot honestly say that I have taken any real pictures. Below are a couple of touristy shots I took last weekend of a Dravidian temple from the 7th century and the building across the street from where I work. Although all new, every day as I am standing outside smoking, I see laundry hung up on a clothes line, people dressed only in Lungis washing themselves out of buckets of water, and similar sights that don't seem to quite fit the steel and glass image the building is trying to pompously portray.
I apologize for not being anywhere near describing the experiences I have had here, I will do my best to capture more over the next weeks...


No rest for the wicked... PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 08 May 2006
Drinking in AirportsIt's been a while since my last entry. If I get this right, I have been in Berlin, Stuttgart, Frankfurt, London, Zurich, Milan, Hastings, and who knows where else since then. The picture on the right is from Zurich airport, which apparently has the longest business lounge airport bar in the world (it was indeed pretty long). My friend Brett once recorded a song with an Artist named John Fournier called "Drinking in Airports", which kind of stuck with me ;-)
Have been collecting my boarding passes and it's turned into a cute little book. Have to figure out how I can use it somehow... In the least, I might scan them and then we shall see. Maybe I will use them for my Once-Around-The-World Party invite. That's right, Once-Around-The-World. I guess that other people have done this before, and some in 80 days, but for me it's a first. I thought I would return to LA after finishing my project in London this week, be there for a few weeks and then think about going to India for a vacation and to visit my cousin who is over there at the moment, but things turned out a bit different...
Looks like I will be going to Chennai (Madras) end of this week as soon as I am done here in London, and no, not (just) on vacation, but to work on a project over there... Of course, not having been home in the last three months (wherever that place was again), I will travel there with all my winter clothes that brought me through the cold months in Europe. There, I am told, it will be about 40 degrees Celcius and 85-90% Humidity. Think I won't need my jackets... Then it's on to LA to exchange clothes, catch my breath and all that good stuff. At that point, I will have actually gone around the world once this year having started in LA in February - thus the party.
After that it's back to India until the end of July and then... we shall see... Don't have a plan yet, but am sure I will have one eventually, even if no plan ever survives initial contact ;-)
How appropriate, though, that my mystic tour 2006 would actually lead me to India. What better place. Had hoped to be there this January to study with my Yoga teacher's teacher. Then I had hoped to go there to visit Auroville, where my cousin is currently working on a project, but that, too, did not go as planned. Now I am going there for a whole set of different reasons, but I still hope that I will have the chance to study some Yoga, see Auroville, check out the Theosophical Society, and maybe a couple of Ashrams and magnificient sages... Ahhhh.... mystical it is indeed ;-)

On that note, here a collage with more pictures taken for a picture contest a friend of mine is holding. Of course, the topic is "toilets".... The ones below are from Frankfurt and London (Camden Town):

toilets of the world

Living in the flow PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 23 March 2006
Germany - near Munich One of the things I love most about traveling and being at the whim of a project schedule is that it forces one to be "home", "centered", "at peace" with whatever is happening in one's environment. The more the world around is fluctuating, moving, changing, the more one needs to focus internally in order to find stability. Having one's sight set inward, sooner or later one encounters the observer behind the ego, that something that looks through one's eyes, is behind all thought, and calmly observes all that is happening without attachment, desire, or any other false connection to the world around.
As the landscape changes and events and people come and go, it is helpful to focus on staying and living in the flow, appreciating all that is happening no matter if ego finds it pleasant or not, loving all who are around, the strangers on the street, the special ones one has to sometimes leave behind.

Rome - View from the Spanish StepsHere also some more pictures from my travels... After Brussels, a short stunt in Cologne (had some "Himmel and Aed" - lovely blood sausage with mashed potatoes - a local specialty), it was back to London (had some pig's head, ear and cheek there, which was delicious), then on to Munich (where I had the Bavarian version of blood sausage, apples and potatoes as well as some delicious tounge - and a most magnificient restaurant experience with a Tarot card reader, a masseuse and a delightful show), and from there to Rome (some more tripe, pizza, of course, and some oxtail), and back to London (more pig's head - couldn't help myself, and more Japanese delights such as pickled octopus and grilled smelt).
This weekend, it will be on to Berlin, then Frankfurt, Stuttgart and Zurich before I finish my project here in London. Lots to look forward to ;-)


Mussels in Brussels PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 04 March 2006
Belgium 2006The last location on my tour was Brussels. Did not get to see much of it, though. For the most part, I was working either in the office or the hotel room. Did get a chance to have some interesting foods, though. While Spain had been about Pulpo, Tripe, Entrails, Belgium provided me with Mussels, Cow Diaphragm, and Cuckoo! Did not even know you could eat Cuckoo, but apparently it's a specialty in some areas of Belgium. It was quite delicious I have to say, more tender but a bit like chicken (which I am not too fond of after having seen too many films about how they are typically kept and processed). On of the things I liked about Brussels was the apparent mix of old and new architecture. Especially in the area where I was staying, new glass and steel constructions were shooting out of the ground right next to beautiful old buildings. The office I worked in, e.g. was from the 17th century and had original wood carvings, heavy wooden doors, a sale d'arms and tile work that was just delectable.
This weekend I am in Cologne visiting my brother and then it's on to London. Originally, I was supposed to be in Vienna, which I had very much looked forward to as I love that city, but more urgent needs are calling me to good ole London. Do look forward to being there again, though. In the last year, I have made it home a bit, and I look forward to stopping by some of my favorite places there...
Six Sigma for your Life is off and running and the course starts Monday. We have a pile of people this time around and I look forward to finding out how the results on their stress levels will look in six weeks. If last year's prototype run was any indication, the course should definitely affect the quality of their lives, something dear to my heart ;-)
Pulpo y Sangria PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 22 February 2006


Madrid it was for the last week and a half: Had some delicious foods and drinks, learned a bit of Spanish, enjoyed the relative occasional notsocoldness, took a tourist bus tour (above image being the result), saw impressive art at the Prado (Goya, Rembrandt, Rubens, Tizian, Velasquez, El Greco), and spent the rest of it working in the office or my hotel room...

Six Sigma for Your Life is in full gear. Had a great response to my invitation and the machine is in full gear. Look forward to it starting in the next couple of weeks.

Tomorrow it's on to Germany and from there to Brussels on Sunday... (map of tour)
<< Start < Prev 1 2 Next > End >>

Results 1 - 11 of 12

Main Menu
home
news
faq
projects
thought
links
bookmarks
library
search
contact
projects
Center for Conscious Creativity
Who is creating Your Reality?
doxaworx.com - creating culture
enroll for free!
 
 
find the monk
Drop down the menu below to find the monk
Location
or here...
myspace
tribe
facebook
Unless otherwise noted all content © 2004 philiphorvath.com