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Who Is Swami Beyondananda?

 

Once in many, many lifetimes comes a being so evolved, so

enlightened, so pure that the entire world is transformed.

Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be anyone like that around

these days.

 

Fortunately, we do have Swami Beyondananda to help us maintain our

jestive health in a world that has become less and less funny. As

the Swami says, "Indeed, the world is in a grave state -- and the

best way to overcome gravity is with levity."

 

Swami can truly say he came from humble beginnings. His parents

operated a Humble gas station just outside of Muskogee, Oklahoma. At

a very early age, it became apparent that young Swami was different

from the other children. You know how children quietly put their

heads down on the desk when they fall asleep in class? Well, Swami

would float to the ceiling. His father realized he could not provide

the spiritual training that his gifted young son needed, so he

apprenticed him to the most evolved spiritual teacher in Oklahoma,

the Native American shaman Broken Wind.

 

Broken Wind believed that we are traumatized as babies by intestinal

gas or cholic. The great shaman invented a technique called "gastral

projection" to help release these traumas. His philosophy was

simple: "To air is human ... but to really cut one loose is divine."

Young Swami was a mischievous boy who liked to play pranks on his

teacher while the latter was meditating. Often, he would sneak up on

Broken Wind from behind, grab him around the chest in a kind of

Heimlich maneuver, and squeeze as hard as he could. His good-natured

teacher put up with this for a while. But one day, true to his name,

he gastrally-projected his young charge across the room. Swami

learned a valuable lesson that day: Don't squeeze the shaman.

 

Now Swami grew up in a Methodist family (actually, his father was

Methodist and his mother was Catholic -- so technically, he was a

Rhythm-Methodist) and as a young teenager, he became quite taken

with the opposite sects. He was very impressed when an Oklahoma

swami who called himself the Yogi From Muskogee (Swami has since

taken that title) came to his boy scout troop and taught him to tie

himself into twelve different knots. Swami quickly embraced the path

of the yogi and mastered many advanced techniques, including

levitation. Building on the gift for levity he was born with, Swami

would often hover over the stands at his high school football games

and moon the crowd. He was the only student in Muskogee history ever

to get suspended for being suspended.

 

But like many a young man before him who flew too high too soon, the

Swami was headed for a fall. His accelerated path to yogihood hit a

dead end when his kundalini exploded in a crowded department store.

No one else was injured, but Swami caught an inflection which left

him with a permanent East Indian accent.

 

Now this was in the late 1960s, right in the midst of the Sects

Revolution, and Swami began to explore all kinds of kinky sects. He

studied with the guru of rock n' roll, Baba Oom Mow Mow, who taught

his own version of the Golden Rule: "Do wop unto others as you would

have them do wop unto you."

 

A failed romance with a singer in one of Baba Oom Mow Mow's girl

groups left Swami in heartbreak hotel -- and that was how he Came to

Elvis. When Elvis appeared in a dream asking, "Are you lonesome

tonight?" Swami converted to Presleyterianism right on the spot. It

was one of those new lite religions popping up in those days -- same

satisfaction with one third the commandments. For the prophet Elvis

asks only three things of his flock:

 

1.Love Me Tender. 2.Don't Be Cruel. 3.Please Surrender.

 

And the King promises eternal life as well, for it is written that

old Presleyterians never die -- the just return to Sender. But

still, young Swami was spiritually restless, and he sought out

wilder and wilder sects. The turning point came when he woke up one

morning with a sugar hangover in a strange biker crash pad where the

inhabitants wore saffron leather vests and reeked of incense. That

was when he knew he'd hit bottom -- he had come one thin ponytail

away from becoming a Harley Krishna.

 

That day, the Swami swore off sects completely. Spirit was

immaterial, he decided, and he now sought fulfillment by filling

himself full of all the material goodies life could provide. He

moved to New York to study with the renowned guru of the stock

market, Yuan Tibet, who instructed him in the Dowist path. Swami

became more and more dependent on the stock market prophet, buying

soybean futures like there was no tamari. Suddenly, the price of

soybeans plummeted (due, it was later revealed, to a rumor planted

by unscrupulous dairy-heir that tofu actually came from between the

toes of Himalayan hikers). Swami frantically tried to call Yuan

Tibet for his sage advice, but he could not be found. Tragically,

there had been some prophet-taking on Wall Street, somebody took

him, and he was never heard from again.

 

Swami's fortunes fell just as the last slew of credit card bills

arrived, and he found himself in the midst of a near-debt

experience. He was a fiscal wreck. His whole world had come crashing

down in one swell poop, and as is often the case, he sought meaning

in the midst of tragedy. He stood in Central Park, shaking his fist

at the sky and shouting, "What is the MEANING of this?"

 

Well then the most amazing thing happened (for the complete account,

you will have to read Swami's new book, Duck Soup For The Soul). But

to make a long satori short, Swami was struck by enlightning during

a brainstorm, his clown chakra opened, and now he sees funny. Since

that time, Swami has traveled the world preaching FUNdamentalism --

accent on Fun. He has become a well-known figure in the Humor

Potential Movement, helping folks release jestive blockages such as

irregularhilarity, irony deficiency, humorrhoids and yes, even truth

decay.

 

While Swami has no followers per se (he says he gets paranoid when

he thinks he's being followed), he does train comic-kazis in the

ancient Chinese path of Fu Ling. "To live in this world," the Swami

says, "you must be able to take a joke. And if you can leave a few

as well, all the better."

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"fr0gdance7" <fr0gdance7

<Kundaliniyoga>

Wednesday, September 15, 2004 11:25 PM

Kundalini Yoga haha! a good laugh does wonders for the soul

 

 

> Who Is Swami Beyondananda?

>

> Once in many, many lifetimes comes a being so evolved, so

> enlightened, so pure that the entire world is transformed.

> Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be anyone like that around

> these days.

>

> Fortunately, we do have Swami Beyondananda to help us maintain our

> jestive health in a world that has become less and less funny. As

> the Swami says, "Indeed, the world is in a grave state -- and the

> best way to overcome gravity is with levity."

>

> Swami can truly say he came from humble beginnings. His parents

> operated a Humble gas station just outside of Muskogee, Oklahoma. At

> a very early age, it became apparent that young Swami was different

> from the other children. You know how children quietly put their

> heads down on the desk when they fall asleep in class? Well, Swami

> would float to the ceiling. His father realized he could not provide

> the spiritual training that his gifted young son needed, so he

> apprenticed him to the most evolved spiritual teacher in Oklahoma,

> the Native American shaman Broken Wind.

>

> Broken Wind believed that we are traumatized as babies by intestinal

> gas or cholic. The great shaman invented a technique called "gastral

> projection" to help release these traumas. His philosophy was

> simple: "To air is human ... but to really cut one loose is divine."

> Young Swami was a mischievous boy who liked to play pranks on his

> teacher while the latter was meditating. Often, he would sneak up on

> Broken Wind from behind, grab him around the chest in a kind of

> Heimlich maneuver, and squeeze as hard as he could. His good-natured

> teacher put up with this for a while. But one day, true to his name,

> he gastrally-projected his young charge across the room. Swami

> learned a valuable lesson that day: Don't squeeze the shaman.

>

> Now Swami grew up in a Methodist family (actually, his father was

> Methodist and his mother was Catholic -- so technically, he was a

> Rhythm-Methodist) and as a young teenager, he became quite taken

> with the opposite sects. He was very impressed when an Oklahoma

> swami who called himself the Yogi From Muskogee (Swami has since

> taken that title) came to his boy scout troop and taught him to tie

> himself into twelve different knots. Swami quickly embraced the path

> of the yogi and mastered many advanced techniques, including

> levitation. Building on the gift for levity he was born with, Swami

> would often hover over the stands at his high school football games

> and moon the crowd. He was the only student in Muskogee history ever

> to get suspended for being suspended.

>

> But like many a young man before him who flew too high too soon, the

> Swami was headed for a fall. His accelerated path to yogihood hit a

> dead end when his kundalini exploded in a crowded department store.

> No one else was injured, but Swami caught an inflection which left

> him with a permanent East Indian accent.

>

> Now this was in the late 1960s, right in the midst of the Sects

> Revolution, and Swami began to explore all kinds of kinky sects. He

> studied with the guru of rock n' roll, Baba Oom Mow Mow, who taught

> his own version of the Golden Rule: "Do wop unto others as you would

> have them do wop unto you."

>

> A failed romance with a singer in one of Baba Oom Mow Mow's girl

> groups left Swami in heartbreak hotel -- and that was how he Came to

> Elvis. When Elvis appeared in a dream asking, "Are you lonesome

> tonight?" Swami converted to Presleyterianism right on the spot. It

> was one of those new lite religions popping up in those days -- same

> satisfaction with one third the commandments. For the prophet Elvis

> asks only three things of his flock:

>

> 1.Love Me Tender. 2.Don't Be Cruel. 3.Please Surrender.

>

> And the King promises eternal life as well, for it is written that

> old Presleyterians never die -- the just return to Sender. But

> still, young Swami was spiritually restless, and he sought out

> wilder and wilder sects. The turning point came when he woke up one

> morning with a sugar hangover in a strange biker crash pad where the

> inhabitants wore saffron leather vests and reeked of incense. That

> was when he knew he'd hit bottom -- he had come one thin ponytail

> away from becoming a Harley Krishna.

>

> That day, the Swami swore off sects completely. Spirit was

> immaterial, he decided, and he now sought fulfillment by filling

> himself full of all the material goodies life could provide. He

> moved to New York to study with the renowned guru of the stock

> market, Yuan Tibet, who instructed him in the Dowist path. Swami

> became more and more dependent on the stock market prophet, buying

> soybean futures like there was no tamari. Suddenly, the price of

> soybeans plummeted (due, it was later revealed, to a rumor planted

> by unscrupulous dairy-heir that tofu actually came from between the

> toes of Himalayan hikers). Swami frantically tried to call Yuan

> Tibet for his sage advice, but he could not be found. Tragically,

> there had been some prophet-taking on Wall Street, somebody took

> him, and he was never heard from again.

>

> Swami's fortunes fell just as the last slew of credit card bills

> arrived, and he found himself in the midst of a near-debt

> experience. He was a fiscal wreck. His whole world had come crashing

> down in one swell poop, and as is often the case, he sought meaning

> in the midst of tragedy. He stood in Central Park, shaking his fist

> at the sky and shouting, "What is the MEANING of this?"

>

> Well then the most amazing thing happened (for the complete account,

> you will have to read Swami's new book, Duck Soup For The Soul). But

> to make a long satori short, Swami was struck by enlightning during

> a brainstorm, his clown chakra opened, and now he sees funny. Since

> that time, Swami has traveled the world preaching FUNdamentalism --

> accent on Fun. He has become a well-known figure in the Humor

> Potential Movement, helping folks release jestive blockages such as

> irregularhilarity, irony deficiency, humorrhoids and yes, even truth

> decay.

>

> While Swami has no followers per se (he says he gets paranoid when

> he thinks he's being followed), he does train comic-kazis in the

> ancient Chinese path of Fu Ling. "To live in this world," the Swami

> says, "you must be able to take a joke. And if you can leave a few

> as well, all the better."

>

>

Kundalini Yoga - for the best online

selection of Books, Videos and DVDs on Kundalini Yoga, based on ancient

technology as brought to the West by Yogi Bhajan. Also a great range of

beautiful Meditation and Mantra CDs, all with RealAudio sound clips.

> - visit

> Links

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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