– The human mind will not be confined to any limits. –
Johan Wolfgang von Goethe 1749 – 1832
Last week we attended the British premiere of an inspiring new documentary. Meditation Creativity Peace features the film director David Lynch. Presented by David Lynch Foundation UK at the Curzon Mayfair, the documentary was shot by film students and a camera crew from David Lynch Foundation Television over a two-year period. It follows the director as he embarks on a tour of 16 countries. He speaks to college students and members of the general public on the subjects he’s most passionate about: meditation, his films, world peace and his charitable foundation.
The David Lynch Foundation was established in the USA in 2005, followed by its official launch in the UK by the award-winning filmmaker. Its aim is to help people of all ages and from all walks of life to overcome stress, suffering and hardship, and to unfold the full potential of their lives. As stress in society rises to epidemic levels, many children and adults are suffering from chronic stress-related disorders: anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and substance abuse to name just a few.
The David Lynch Foundation was established to support the implementation of scientifically proven stress-reducing programmes. These use a holistic approach, including Transcendental Meditation, that promote creativity, happiness and success. It believes that for lasting transformation to take place on the outside, then change must begin within. As a result, the lives of children, the homeless, prisoners and war veterans have all been transformed by the aforementioned programmes. Effectiveness has been researched and proven at leading medical institutions, including Harvard, Stanford and Yale Medical Schools.
David Lynch first learned Transcendental Meditation as a young man in 1973, and has not missed a day’s meditation since: 20 minutes in the morning and 20 minutes in the evening. Whether on a film set or travelling around the world, he always finds time for the practice; he refers to this as ‘diving within’. Meditation Creativity Peace opens in typical Lynchian fashion.
The director is filmed in crisp black and white in front of a large canvas of abstract art with music of his own composition playing in the background. He holds up a rather delicious looking donut (minus a bite) as an analogy for meditation: ‘you don’t know how sweet and how good it is until you have tasted it. Meditation gives an experience much sweeter than this donut. It gives the experience of the sweetest nectar of life: pure bliss consciousness’. This sets the tone for the documentary.
As a director, writer, painter, musician and occasional actor, David Lynch is a true artist and he thinks and speaks like one. The documentary is peppered with colourful and very beautiful analogies. When he explains the actual process of Transcendental Meditation, talks about the unified field or discusses quantum physics, he doesn’t blind one with complicated science-speak. Rather he uses simple words and simple visual aids: a black marker pen, white board and his own doodles.
We see him visiting cities as diverse as Jerusalem, Sofia, Kiev, Palermo, Lisbon and Edinburgh and fielding all sorts of questions from How would you describe your creative process? to What is the meaning of life to How did monkeys become human? And employing great elegance, he answers them all, without so much as a flinch.
The David Lynch Foundation has provided scholarships for meditation instruction for thousands of inner-city school students, veterans with post-traumatic stress, incarcerated adults and teens, and homeless adults and children throughout the United States, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and Europe.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the founder of Transcendental Meditation, had two goals: enlightenment of the individual and peace on earth. David Lynch wants to achieve both.
Meditation Creativity Peace is available to watch here
For further information on:
The foundation please visit: David Lynch Foundation UK
Meditation please visit: Transcendental Meditation
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