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It's Here Now (Are You?): A Spiritual Memoir [Hardcover]

Bhagavan Das
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Oct 13 1997
In this inspiring spiritual memoir, Bhagavan Das fulfills his original mission as a messenger of Eastern wisdom and sheds needed light on the new spirituality of the West.

Leaving California at age 18 with $40 and a guitar, Michael Riggs traveled to India, searching for something more than "the American Dream." Once there, he studied with several teachers and lived the austere life of a yogi, eventually falling under the loving blanket of Neem Karoli Baba, who renamed him Bhagavan Das, or "servant of God." For seven years Das moved through the subcontinent, from Bombay to Madras, Kashmir to Darjeeling, fully embracing Hinduism and all its practices, worshiping the Divine Mother, and studying Buddhism, transcendental meditation, and tantra.  In Nepal he met and became the teacher of Richard Alpert, the Harvard professor, LSD experimenter, and expatriate whom Neem Karoli Baba would rename Ram Dass.

After the publication of the bestselling classic Be Here Now, in which Alpert described their experiences together, Bhagavan Das arrived back in the United States to find he was a celebrity.  Traveling on the guru circuit--where he forged a number of influential and lasting relationships with other seekers such as Allen Ginsberg, Alan Watts, and Chogyam Trungpa--Bhagavan Das lived more like a rock star than the saint he was proclaimed to be.  He spoke and sang in front of groups of thousands, had sex with spiritual groupies, did drugs, and witnessed the hypocrisy of his path and that of his peers.  His disillusionment continued to grow; meanwhile, he felt an intense pressure to earn a more traditional living for his wife and children, and for years he struggled to integrate his Eastern mysticism with Western spirituality.  In compelling detail, Das explores the myriad of forces that sent him on a tortuous journey that led him to study the peyote culture of the American Indians with Little Joe Gomez, fall under the influence of Joya, become a born-again Christian, follow Ammachi Ma, and eventually, after hitting rock bottom, find a way to reconcile both worlds.

It's Here Now (Are You?) is the story of a spiritual awakening in the East, a fall from grace in the West, and a peaceful reconciliation with the sacred center.  It is a vivid memoir of one man's search for higher purpose amidst temptation and the pressures of contemporary life.  It is also the love story of the spiritual marriage between Bhagavan Das and his guru, Neem Karoli Baba.  With his unique historical perspective, wisdom, and insight, Bhagavan Das sheds light on today's belief systems and how a new spirituality has developed in this country.  A spiritual adventure like no other, It's Here Now (Are You?) will inspire seekers of any age on their own road to fulfillment.

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Bhagavan Das is back. The 1970's guru of egregiousness, who inspired the title of Ram Dass' Be Here Now, has penned a spiritual memoir that is stranger than fiction, farther out than the Oort Cloud. We last saw our hero when he was a spiritual rock star touring the hippie circuit with Allen Ginsberg. Soon thereafter he dropped out of the scene and took a job at a Dodge dealership to support his second family. Peyote beckoned him to the desert, then he raised magic mushrooms, sold encyclopedias to Marines, dabbled in solar power, attended Bible college, and ended up selling overpriced car insurance to poor people--until his latest 18-year-old girlfriend flipped out on acid and ended his career.

Bhagavan Das's writing is guileless. He neither boasts nor apologizes. He describes the manic ride he has been on since he left California after high school. For seven years he wandered around India and Nepal, practicing austerities, sitting at the feet of gurus, studying Buddhist scriptures, and getting laid. The common denominator in his pursuits seems to be a search for the ultimate high. Whether he is kissed on the forehead by a saint, standing at the foot of a 20-foot stone statue of Vishnu, lost in meditation, dropping acid, or being initiated into tantric sex, his descriptions are in the same terms: "mind-blowing," "out-of-body," "ultimate bliss," "beyond the beyond." It's Here Now (Are You?) is an entertaining, vicarious journey through a life that you don't mind visiting, but you wouldn't want to live. --Brian Bruya --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

From Library Journal

Michael Riggs was a disillusioned American teenager who traveled to India in 1964 to forge his spiritual way. Seven years later, he returned to America as Bhagavan Das, the name given to him by his guru, Neem Karoli Baba. While in India, Bhagavan met Richard Alpert, the Harvard professor who became Ram Dass and who wrote Be Here Now, which launched them both to celebrity status during the guru craze in America. Practicing Hindu austerities by day and partying wildly by night, Bhagavan hobnobbed with Allen Ginsberg, Allan Watts, Timothy Leary, and others. In this memoir the author idealizes his spiritual exploits in a rambling, incoherent fashion that epitomizes his life of contradictions. Although weakly written, this is a memoir by a significant figure chronicling the disenchantment with Western materialism that has sparked many to turn to Eastern mysticism.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Toxic Personality, "spiritual" or not May 1 2000
By Hermit
Format:Hardcover
This book is the equivalent of a spiritual Stephen King novel. I recommend that you read it so that you can see what kind of 'spiritual persons' to STAY AWAY from. The narrator's only agenda is getting himself high. He always walks out on anyone to whom he makes any commitments, much to their pain and despair. He simply cares for no one but himself. Always a 'taker', never a giver.

Who you choose to hang out with in your life has a lot to do with where you go and how you get there and how you come out when the trip is over.

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5.0 out of 5 stars An Inspiring Tale of a Spiritual Journey April 15 2003
Format:Paperback
This is really a great book and one that I would recommend to anyone interested in devotional spirituality, especially Hindu and Buddhist. This is a very honest book and he has clearly made it a point to not glamorize it or gloss over the sordid parts. Highly recommended!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Another Mahabharata Jan 28 2003
Format:Paperback
I can read Mahabharata for spiritual food - but when my humanness was 'stuck' in my fears, it was so easy for me to get 'stuck' in the grandeur and antiquity of it. At those times I wish I had the 'living Mahabharata', who is Bhagavan Das.

Bhagavan Das is also Arjuna in the Maharabharata.
To me what's more Heroic about 'It's Here Now (Are you?)' than the great epic is: the epic was seen through Sanjaya's higher eye (intuition?) and written by Saint Valmiki. No big deal for Arjuna here, eventhough every truth in it was born through his fears as well as greatness... To walk through fears with honesty and having that same honesty to share it with others - that's a Real human being! Now I understand there is nothing more spiritual than being human. Bhagavan Das is everybody put together -Arjuna, Krishna, Sanjaya, Duryodana, Valmiki; an epic as solely himself.

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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Jai Bhagavan Das!
I have the luck to listen to and give Bhagavan Das a hug every couple months, and never see my copy of this book because one of my friends have inevitably borrowed it. Read more
Published on Oct 27 2002
5.0 out of 5 stars The Proof of the Pudding is in the Eating
I remember picking up _It's Still Here (Are You?)_ and paging through it a few times before finally purchasing it. The book simply haunted me; I came back to it again and again. Read more
Published on Oct 16 2002 by Kurt A. Bruder
2.0 out of 5 stars no religous insight here
First off, let me say that I approached this book with no preconceptions. I was not alive during the sixties, and I have never taken any real interest in learning about the gurus... Read more
Published on Aug 31 2002 by Joseph C Huguelet
5.0 out of 5 stars Let him who is without sin...
This is probably not a book that will make much sense to hard-headed "thinking types". But for anyone with a nuanced understanding of religious devotion and yogic experience, it is... Read more
Published on May 20 2002 by "nyonpa"
5.0 out of 5 stars Very Interesting story of an ongoing spiritual search
I was very interested in reading this book especially after
reading "Be Here Now" by Ram Dass. I had wondered after reading that book what became of Bhagavan Das. Read more
Published on Jan 19 2002 by CPTScott
5.0 out of 5 stars A book of great historical value.
This is a "spiritual memior" which describes Michael Riggs' (Bhagavan Das) spiritual search. His journey reads like a who's who of eastern religion. Read more
Published on Oct 12 2000 by Shawn Regan
4.0 out of 5 stars A fun read, valuable history, but not really a 'guide'.
Lots of 60's spiritual history comes alive here. Good, bad and weird. It reads easily, as if it was dictated orally in a 'rap' mode, and then carefully edited and assembled by... Read more
Published on Sep 22 2000 by nonamespecified
3.0 out of 5 stars Gump das careens around the 60's-90's spiritual circus.
Nice guy, I can relate to the madness, fun reading but rough living it I would think. When you view the origional intelligence as a "oneness" that isn't self aware with... Read more
Published on Jan 25 1999
4.0 out of 5 stars Losing your mind in India and finding it feeling funny
After getting to knowing Ram Dass in Be Here now it feels right getting to knowing Bhagavan Das too. It's Here Now (Are You? Read more
Published on Dec 20 1998 by noongaffney@hotmail.com
3.0 out of 5 stars One man's story; a world searching for It's Soul
Look at us through the lens of Bhagavan Das and his spiritual journey. He comes along initiating much of the West into, new to us, Spiritual and Metaphysical systems. Read more
Published on Nov 23 1998 by Ritch Hoard
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