Ram Dass with group of people

BEING RAM DASS: The spiritual icon’s autobiography, Part I of II [book review]

Last updated: February 22nd, 2021
Cover of Being Ram Dass book

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BEING RAM DASS: The spiritual icon’s autobiography

Ram Dass & Rameshwar Das

[Sounds True, 488 pages]

“When the flower blooms, the bees come of their own accord.”

Sri Ramakrishna

There are some lives that are “larger than life,” in the sense that they become a pattern for other lives. They are, in some sense, what Dr. Carl Jung called archetypal. The life of Richard Alpert, later known as Ram Dass (1931-2019), was such a life.

It’s typical that an archetypal pattern is potent for some, but not all people. No doubt, there are still people who have never heard of Ram Dass. However, for a large number, beginning with his contemporaries in the 1960s, Ram Dass’ life and transformations—the “lives within lives”—are one of these significant patterns.

For the 10 years before he passed away on December 22, 2019, due to complications from the stroke he’d suffered more than 20 years before, he worked on this autobiography with his longtime friend and Guru-brother, Rameshwar Dass, whose voice also narrates the audio version that I’m listening to. 

Cover of Be Here Now by Ram Dass

A number of the stories in the current volume are versions of ones that Ram Dass told in his lectures, or in the introduction to his best-known book, Be Here Now. Many, though, are told here in much greater detail than in previous versions. Furthermore, for the first time, all the phases of his evolution are woven together in a single narrative, enabling the reader to get a sharper picture of this life and its rather epic quality.

Soul brothers and sisters


I realize that in this review, I’m speaking not only to fellow Baby Boomers, but to several generations who have come of age since those years when we were first learning of the psychedelic explorations and later, the firing of the “infamous” Timothy Leary and his partner, Richard Alpert, from their positions at Harvard University for giving LSD to an undergraduate. (The powerful first chapter, in fact, takes place in the office of Harvard president Nathan Pusey, as “Dr. Alpert” ruminates on all that has transpired up to that point, awaiting Pusey’s judgment. The drama of this “in the middle of things” beginning totally roped me in as a reader.)

A couple of years after that incident, word spread that the aforementioned Dr. Alpert had become the bearded, white-robed, mala-bead-laden “guru” (a word that Ram Dass never used to describe himself), giving talks about his pilgrimage to India and his transformation at the hands of “an old man in a blanket” whom he’d met at a Temple in the foothills of the Himalayas.

The story quickly became the stuff of legend: how, in Katmandu, Nepal, in 1967, Richard had walked into a restaurant called The Blue Tibetan. There, he noticed a tall, shaggy American dressed as an Indian Sadhu.  He intuitively felt a conviction that this fellow knew the Truth he himself was seeking.

Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert (also known as Ram Dass), Harvard days
Timothy Leary (left) and Richard Alpert during their days at Harvard University

I had seen Richard Alpert speak as part of a Symposium given at Northwestern University, earlier in 1967. He was a bespectacled, suit-and-tie attired panel member speaking in a somewhat professorial tone.

A couple of years later, one of my high school friends who had been a student at Harvard and had attended some of Ram Dass’ first lectures after his return from India, told me about them on a visit back to our hometown. He also showed me a copy of the first edition of Be Here Now, published as a sheaf of unbound pages in a low cardboard box, under the title From Bindu To Ojas (rough translation: From Binding to Freedom). Most of what I saw and heard that day passed me by, but a little bit stuck.

A year or so later, I had my own experience of Oneness, as a powerful force of Love came flowing out of a poster of Meher Baba and transported me temporarily to a state of union similar to what Ram Dass experienced when he met his Guru (see COMING TO BABA: My 43-Year Romance With Meher Baba).

Many in my generation found their lives somehow mirroring that of Ram Dass. This period, of course, was one of cultural dislocation and breakdown in America. The assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Senator Robert Kennedy were only two of many recent traumas to our national psyche.

Ram Dass’ life, as he mentions in the book, threaded its way through such pain and disintegration to the Soul. Many in my generation have thus felt like his “soul brothers and sisters” for half a century now. Whatever we were doing, he had either done a little while before, or was doing alongside us.

Over the years, he spoke in most of the large cities in America, and indeed, much of the world. These talks were always the most intimate of gatherings. They affirmed what so many of us were learning ourselves. It was like a huge community of seekers and people who—whatever their own spiritual, social or personal identifications—were themselves on this “journey to the East,” whose ultimate value was the Oneness of all beings in Love.

I know that the archetypal pattern of Ram Dass’ life remains relevant to the generations who followed us Baby Boomers. For quite some time now, Sages and others have been saying that the world is on the cusp of a new age of Intuition and brotherhood/sisterhood. This presentiment is not limited to a single generation.

It is fortunate that Ram Dass continues to live in books like this one and his earlier works, as well as in films and on many, many videos. His kindness and sense of humour helped get his message across, even to many who didn’t share the cultural trappings of his own lifestyle.

Back in 1976, I remember seeing many RAM DASS FOR PRESIDENT bumper stickers in America. For those making the turn toward the Oneness residing in all, he remains a timelessly eloquent spokesperson, an “everyman” on the Spiritual Path.

The early life of Ram Dass


Ram Dass alone (black and white)
Ram Dass during a series of talks, from which the text of Be Here Now was largely taken, at a sculpture studio in Manhattan in 1967 or ’68. (c) Photo Rameshwar Das

He was born Richard Alpert, to well-off Jewish parents in the U.S. city of Boston, Massachusetts. His father was a powerful man, a lawyer who later became president of the New York/New Haven Railroad.

Being Ram Dass goes into great detail in describing the joys and difficulties of Richard’s upbringing. Like many children, he went through periods of social isolation, alternating with other phases when he enjoyed a measure of popularity. Gradually, he began to notice how he could mitigate his suffering by building on serendipitous positive experiences. He began to see what his strengths were and to use them as springboards to distinguish himself and improve the quality of his life. In secret, he also struggled emotionally with bisexuality, from the onset of adolescence.

The book unfolds a picture of him slowly accruing the confidence required to handle the intense demands of the life that awaited him. At one point during Richard’s graduate schooling at Stanford University on America’s West Coast, his father, who had just assumed the presidency of the railroad, phoned him in tears, saying, “I don’t know anything about running a railroad!” He begged his son to return to Boston and help him.

Richard was unwilling to forego his training in psychology, which marked the beginning of his investigation of the mind, which slowly led him towards and eventually into the realms of the spiritual. However, he agreed—amazingly—to “commute.” He began a regimen of twice-a-week 13-hour flights on propeller planes, the only plane type available in the late 1950s.

He spent three days each week in Boston helping his Dad, then flew back to Stanford to fulfill his obligations there. This went on for some time. My mouth fell open as I learned this. It shows, I feel, what a powerful personality Richard was, even before meeting Timothy Leary, and long before his trip to India.

The sincerity of seeking


Ram Dass in red baseball cap
Ram Dass at the Hanuman Temple in Taos, New Mexico, in 2004 (photo by Jon Seskevich)

I was the recipient of Ram Dass’ kindness in 1976. He helped me overcome sexual shame that had been blocking my life.

My breakthrough took place during one two-hour meeting in Ram Dass’ motel room in Oklahoma City, where I had flown from St. Louis in order to meet him there the morning after his lecture at the Civic Auditorium. For around the next six months, he lovingly became like a second father to me, in order to help me integrate this breakthrough into my life (see HAPPY RE-BIRTHDAY TO ME!: A personal essay by Max Reif).

I mention this to emphasize how kind Ram Dass was. He had a beautiful disposition, and was nearly always easy and inspiring to be around. Once, when I was discouraged, he told me on a phone call, “Max, you’re gonna turn out beautiful, whether you like it or not!”

However, as I made my way through Being Ram Dass, I found myself feeling threatened by certain chapters, especially the ones about his life as a psychedelic “psychonaut.” I took eight psychedelic trips myself. They led me into areas I wasn’t able to deal with, and I broke down for awhile.

Ram Dass, on the other hand, lived in “psychedelic communes” where, in addition to frequent LSD or psilocybin trips—during one period, every day for three weeks—the “extended families” living together would do a communal trip once a week. These chapters introduced me to a level of interpersonal intensity that at times made me want to run and hide. They led me to do several extensive journaling sessions.

I continued with the book not only because of my personal connection, but because, in spite of its intensity, I felt Being Ram Dass to be a document of deep honesty and authenticity. By that, I mean that it followed its subject’s life as it had actually been lived. It allowed me to “live Ram Dass’ life with him”, practically from its inception. The reason I was interested in doing that was that from nearly the beginning, I recognized this life as a sincere quest for Truth, and even more than that, for Love.

When Ram Dass takes psilocybin for the first time, he exults not because it “blew his mind,” but because it enables him to see (for the first time) that he is not his mind, but a Soul.

Later in his psychedelic career, Ram Dass comes to feel that all the tripping isn’t getting him anywhere. It isn’t taking him closer to being that soul and heart, all the time. It isn’t taking him home. And so, out of disillusionment with everything around him, he sets out for India with a friend who had purchased a land-rover, having not the slightest clue whether he will find what he seeks. The rest is history.

Meher Baba next to God in a Pill pamphlet (composite photo)
Left: Meher Baba in the 1960s. Right: The cover of a widely-circulated booklet, published in 1966 by Sufism Reoriented, that was compiled from the correspondence of Ram Dass, as well as several others, with Meher Baba.

During the period when his disillusionment with the potential of psychedelics was setting in, Ram Dass corresponded with Meher Baba, whom he recognized as one of the world’s living spiritual authorities. Meher Baba’s secretary replied at the Master’s behest, telling him “To a few sincere seekers such as yourself,” LSD could initially serve to arouse spiritual longing, but could then serve no further constructive purpose.*

That sincerity  of Ram Dass’ seeking is why I signed on for the duration of this book.

Neem Karoli Baba


Statue of Neem Karoli Baba
Neem Karoli Baba

The pivotal 16th chapter of Being Ram Dass narrates his meeting of Neem Karoli Baba (Maharaji). I’m not sure if the language has even been edited from previous spoken and published versions of the story. Either way, I find the prose exquisite.

Silence “speaks” a great deal in this story. There are no extra words, only those necessary to convey the transmission—miracle—that took place: a journey from the mind to the heart. Richard Alpert, the seeker, after travelling thousands of miles on a sort of desperate quest of faith and longing, comes home—to himself.

A return to the United States


This review covers Part I of the book and some of Part II. After being trained as a yogi for six months in a Temple during the northern Indian winter on Maharaji’s order, Ram Dass returns to America. Maharaji has not given him any instructions by about what to do there.

After a few weeks, Ram Dass begins to respond to some speaking invitations that have trickled in. His audiences are expecting talks about psychedelics. What they get instead is the odyssey of his recent transformation. People are riveted. One engagement lasts from 7 p.m. until 3 in the morning!

More and more people begin to seek him out, until within a year or so, a community of seekers and students has materialized, living on the grounds of his father’s estate in New Hampshire, where Ram Dass himself had taken up residence. This takes us to into 1968.

I feel like I’ve already gone through several lifetimes with Ram Dass. And yet, half of the book remains! I will cover the rest of Being Ram Dass in Part II of this review, which will be published at a later date.


* Meher Baba also affirmed that psychedelics, with proper medical supervision, can indeed be useful in psychotherapy.

CONTINUE READING PART II»


image 1: ©Rameshwar Das; image 2: Max Reif; image 3: BoingBoing (Creative Commons) image 4: ©Rameshwar Das; image 4: Jon Seskevich; image 5: Left – Meher Nazar Publications; Right – Wikimedia Commons; image 6: Wikimedia Commons; Top photo: (c) Photo Rameshwar Das

  1. Good review, Max! Strange, isn’t it how we’re connected through RD and Baba – and that 1976 was such an important year for both of us. May it continue to be so.

  2. Glad it met your approval, Stewart, as you, like some of my other friends, also had/have a close Ram Dass connection, having translated BE HERE NOW into German! Yes, ’76–when I was in Kitty Davy’s office at Meher Center in Myrtle Beach, having JUST told her my own Ram Dass story, and as if on cue, the phone rang, and she talked for a moment and then said, “Yes, come on down”…and when she hung up the phone, she looked at me and said, “Well, isn’t that interesting! A young man who has just translated Richard’s book in to German is in New York and wants to come to the Center!”

    And so, we had our little adventures together, so memorable still…enough so that our friendship, now mostly through the “miracle” (or whatever it is 🙂 ) of modern technology, continues, 45 *$&%! years later! Namaste’, brother!

  3. Awesome review Max!!
    I just finished the book and was actually working on a review myself!
    Needless to say….I am happy you ended up writing it!
    Beautiful writing as always!
    It was a moving memoir to say the least.

  4. Forrest, I’d love to see what you have to say about it!
    Maybe “they” would publish TWO reviews…
    Or THREE! Or some Fibunacci sequence number!
    OR…if they say no…just post the whole thing here as another comment!
    Pretty engaging book, eh?
    I’m in process of finishing up the part 2 of this review (its conclusion).

  5. Max,
    That’s so amazing you saw Ram Dass speak.
    Wow is all i can say.
    That would have been a surreal experience within itself.
    Reading Being Ram Dass literally brought me to tears, laughter and touched my soul all at once.
    You are a rare and beautiful soul Max.

  6. It wasn’t surreal, Forrest…it brought a person closer to the Real! (obviously.) 🙂
    Well, maybe you heard him in your previous life, who knows!
    AND, we can still hear him speak on YouTube.

    The rest of my review is coming out tomorrow. The last part of it is a personal remembrance of what Ram Dass was like. That went beyond even the beauties of what the book reveals…at least for me.
    I had a friend who after reading how he helped me, in my late 20’s, said, “So that is the answer to life’s question? We all need to go to Ram Dass?”

    But God provides to each longing heart, and surely the needs that he met during his life on Earth are being met today as well, in other ways, as God is Infinite. There may be seasons where it is spiritually “dry” on Earth and a soul’s longing is rewarded in another lifetime…but as I understand it, the spiritual floodgates are still open, in OUR time, The longing is the key, it seems.

  7. I’ve finished the part of the book that this review covers, and I’ve been exposed to so much interesting information and people, I’m almost at a loss for words. I didn’t know how interesting I would find it, diving into a book about Ram Dass, given that I didn’t have much prior knowledge of him, but he was such an enticing writer that he completely drew me into his storyline within the first few pages.

    It seems like every step he takes in life leads seamlessly to the next step, gently pushing him forward on his spiritual path, even if it seems like a particular step is a “mistake” at the time. I could even understand his drug experimentation, even though I have no direct experience with this myself. I have to say that his first few days with Neem Karoli Baba were the most memorable part of this section, though, especially when he comes to realize that Mahajari IS his guide. I’m also excited to read about the other people he meets in Part II, whom I haven’t been “introduced” to yet.

  8. Thank you for sharing your response, Erica!
    I am personally FASCINATED by the entire phenomenon of what a “generation” is, and how communication occurs across generational boundaries…or does NOT occur…is, or may be, in some cases, impossible beyond a certain point! (I tried to write a poem about this subject once, but it was too much to take on. I did save a copy of my effort, though, maybe I’ll try to finish it now, or soon.)

    So, I didn’t, and still actually DON’T know how much of a “generational thing” Ram Dass was or is. I said in this review that his message and import reaches beyond any one generation. But I don’t have the specifics on that…on how available he…his life and message…is to people of your age and younger, or a little older…like my stepson, who is in his late 30s now.

    I remember back in the ’90s, one of the cool things about Ram Dass was that his message was reaching way beyond us relative “younguns” and beyond the so-called counterculture. He would have people of all ages at his talks…all styles of dress…people in business suit, jeans, yoga whites, etc, etc. He would tell a story I still love, sometimes…an elderly woman one night was sitting in the front row at one of his talks. And every time he’d tell a far-out story, he’d see her nod, in a way that seemed like she was saying, “Yep…I’ve been there too!”

    And this went on through the whole talk…stories about his psychedelic experiences, stories about his Guru…and after the talk, I think she was milling around, and either she came up to say hi, or he approached her, and he eventually asked, “I’m curious…I saw you nodding all through the talk, as if you’d been through some equivalent of everything I was talking about. What’s your secret?”

    And the elderly lady said, “I knit.”

    I’ll think about writing something about generations…if the concept ever gets clear enough…for this journal.

    Anyway, thanks again!

    Anyone else want to weigh in about the communicability of Ram Dass’ message to a particular generation or group?

    1. While I can’t relate to a lot of the specific experiences of Ram Dass, as the world has changed a lot since he was a young adult, I think that the general spiritual message still gets through and is accessible to all generations. Positive feelings, sort of feelings of inspiration, welled up in me as I read the book, and are lingering afterward, too. It’s interesting that the lady seemed to have the same spiritual experience with knitting that Ram Dass did with psychedelics, meditation, etc.; I actually think almost anything can be meditation if you approach it with a mindful attitude. Anyhow, I’ll have more thoughts once I finish the rest of the book!

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