Friday, September 29, 2017

Arthur Telling ~ character interview and his novel ~ Yancy Gates: A Dialogue With Self


TITLE: “Yancey Gates: A Dialogue With Self”
RELEASE DATE: April 20, 2017
AUTHOR: Arthur Telling
CATEGORIES: Metaphysical/New Age
PAGE COUNT: 310
ISBN: 978-1543007053
IMPRINT: Gaia’s Essence


 
KEYWORDS: Buddhism, Occult, New Age, Metaphysical, American Indian, World’s Fair, Spiritual, Religion

ONE LINER:
A spiritual theme in a developing San Francisco World’s Fair gives Planning Department employee Yancey Gates a pathway for awakening the mind.

SYNOPSIS:
Yancey Gates seeks enlightenment, while enduring a mundane job plagued with office politics at the San Francisco Planning Department. Opportunity arises when a dynamic new California governor proposes a world’s fair in San Francisco having a spiritual theme.

Yancey’s job in Planning takes on new life as the governor’s plan drops into his lap, and carries him to a Northern California Buddhist monastery where present moment awareness is a way of life, and to a fiery American Indian chieftain whose distrust of the White Man threatens the governor’s plan.

Remaining steadfast as he navigates through challenges and pitfalls, Yancey’s focus stays on the question of his
real purpose, his reason for living, and he brings you, the reader, along a tumultuous journey towards enlightenment.


CHARACTER INTERVIEW: 
Yancey Gates is here today. He is employed at the San Francisco Planning Department, and is on the Governor’s World’s Fair planning committee.


INTERVIEWER: Yancey, it is good to talk with you today.

YANCEY: Thank you sir, it is good to be here.

INTERVIEWER: Can you give a history of how you became a member of the Governor’s World’s Fair committee?

YANCEY: Yes. It began when I was given the assignment of planning a new MUNI transit terminal out in the bay on Treasure Island.

INTERVIEWER: You mean the San Francisco Municipal transit system.

YANCEY: Yes, the MUNI. Ms. Brown, my boss, sent me to Sacramento to pick up some documents for the project, and there I was introduced to the Governor. We hit it off well together, because we were both on the spiritual path, and, you know, the new Fair has a spiritual theme.

INTERVIEWER: Tell me about this spiritual path, and the whys of how you got there?

YANCEY: Sure, of course. It was quite some years ago, my life wasn’t going well, and I began wondering about my whole purpose for living, you know, why do I exist, where did I come from, where am I going; all that. I landed a job in Planning but I wasn’t happy. Frankly I was quite miserable. See, I don’t fit into this world, I really had no social life and the job was not going well.

INTERVIEWER: And so you began your spiritual quest?

YANCEY: Yes, exactly. There was only one book that gave even a hint that there must be some future world better than what we have here. After all, we live and we die, that’s it! Does that make any sense?

INTERVIEWER: And this book, was it religion?

YANCEY: Yes. I picked up a small copy of the Bible, the New Testament. It didn’t answer my questions, but I became more curious. I moved to Berkeley. It’s where revolutions start, where the standard fare is challenged. I found the kinds of answers I wanted at metaphysical bookstores in Berkeley. It became clear that the mind creates the world, not the other way around. The other way makes absolutely no sense, there is no possibility that the self that we know and experience emerges out of dead matter. In fact, what is dead matter? We only know what we see in front of our faces. What is “the physical world”? It’s a term describing what we see in front of our faces. But we cannot be objective observers because we too are “the physical world”. We really don’t know anything else.

INTERVIEWER: You’re saying Science has it wrong?

YANCEY: Newton and Darwin’s science, yes. But the newer science, Quantum Physics, is coming around to the Buddhist way.

INTERVIEWER: Buddhist way? You said you read the Bible.

YANCEY: I started with it. Buddhism and the other Eastern religions make presumption that mind is all that exists, and that mind creates the world in our imaginations, like when we dream.

INTERVIEWER: Let’s consider your original focus for a moment; the Bible. Is that okay?

YANCEY: Sure. Of course.

INTERVIEWER: The Bible is our answer, the West’s answer, to those questions that you said were so important to you. More than two billion people throughout the world are Christians.  This is their path to eternal life, is that not true?

YANCEY: This is a subject I generally avoid. I believe that the Master, that would be Jesus, taught the same essential things that Buddha taught, but the message was twisted when Church authorities who were closest to Rome founded their church in the Master’s name.

INTERVIEWER: In my Sunday School classes, that was some time back, but I distinctly remember the early Christians being at odds with Rome. They were thrown to the lions just for amusement. And their Master was crucified.

YANCEY: I believe the message later became twisted. The original message does not lend itself to organized religion, to a structured body. What Jesus taught, and what all the Masters generally teach, is something of a private matter. We don’t need others to intercede and bring us salvation. Beliefs cannot save us, only wisdom and spiritual knowledge really can.

INTERVIEWER: You don’t believe you’re saved by the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Christ?

YANCEY: Do you?

INTERVIEWER: If you don’t accept the Cross then what do you believe?

YANCEY: The Cross, salvation through the Cross, is a belief. It’s essentially a story. We cannot be saved by a storyline no matter what that storyline is. But we can be fooled into thinking so.

INTERVIEWER: The Church is fooling its members?

YANCEY: I wouldn’t say that. Rather, the Church itself is fooled by an historical story of salvation.

INTERVIEWER: I don’t want to dwell on this too long because I want to talk about the World’s Fair committee that you’re on, but really, without Christ as our salvation, do we have anything remaining but Darwin’s evolution?

YANCEY: Darwin’s evolution is pure doom. With that scenario there is no purpose for living, we’re just doing dumb things for a while and attempting to be not too miserable, so that we can wait it out and then die and be gone. It makes no sense.

INTERVIEWER: So what then is the answer?

YANCEY: Christians can find it in the Gnostic gospels, a few of them, that give a clearer picture of the Jesus message. Like the Gospel of Thomas. It is probably the best gospel we have.

INTERVIEWER: I’ve never heard of that gospel. It is not in the Bible.

YANCEY: Yes, exactly. It’s not because the early Church leaders didn’t understand it. But this gospel tells how to find everlasting life by way of knowledge, not beliefs.

INTERVIEWER: Knowledge, not beliefs? What is the difference? What is knowledge?

YANCEY: Truthfully, knowledge, real knowledge, is the understanding that beliefs are not ultimately true. No belief is true, because beliefs are creations of the imagination.

INTERVIEWER: But the Crucifixion is not a belief, it is an historical fact.

YANCEY: Whether it actually happened or didn’t happen is beside the point. It really doesn’t matter. You see, people imagine things; they imagine events and they imagine stories. Maybe they’ll put the story in a novel or maybe they will pursue their imagination and it will come to pass in this world. Either way, it’s an imagined event. So what if it happened? Would that make any difference? Whether it happened or didn’t happen wouldn’t really matter in the greater scheme of things. No story can save anyone.

INTERVIEWER: So, what is real knowledge?

YANCEY: Real knowledge is, well, it’s a recognition that beliefs are not true, and are yet necessary to our existence. It’s both of these things; not true yet necessary. Beliefs are the clothes we wear, the flowers in the meadow; they are the lifeblood of the world. At the Last Supper, Jesus told his disciples that the wine he was pouring at the feast was his blood. He meant that the body is more than our flesh, it goes beyond the flesh, it is all of what surrounds us, and what surrounds us is entirely our beliefs.

INTERVIEWER: I’m not sure that I understand you. Let’s move on. You said that the Governor is a spiritual man. I’ve never heard him speak of his religion. How would you know this?

YANCEY: As I said, I met him at his office for the MUNI Treasure Island project, which, I didn’t know at the time, was connected to the World’s Fair that was in planning then.

INTERVIEWER: Did he tell you he was a spiritual man?

YANCEY: No, not at all. I just knew that he was, and he could see that I too was on the path. He saw it instantly, I could tell.

INTERVIEWER: How?

YANCEY: It’s a higher plane of thought. I don’t know. You can see light in a person, you see energy, and you know right away they are at a higher level. You can say that we connected. It is why he wanted me on the project and is why he appointed me to the World’s Fair committee,

INTERVIEWER:  Okay, uh, the World’s Fair; you’re on the World’s Fair planning committee, and you have no visible position at the Planning Department where you work. How did you accomplish this?

YANCEY: Yes. At the time, when I was in Planning, the project wasn’t going that well, we were having some problems with some of the peripheral players. The Governor wanted to end legalized gambling on the Indian reservations that were to become a part of the World’s Fair. This is a little difficult to explain. An influential tribal chieftain was organizing demonstrations in Sacramento to counter a federal bill that would end Indian gambling. This was a disruption. And I, well, was helping to iron this out.

INTERVIEWER: And how did you do this?

YANCEY: I couldn’t do much at the Planning Department, because, as you said, I had no authority to do much of anything.

INTERVIEWER: There have been rumors of your run-ins with your supervisors in Planning. Is this what you’re getting at?

YANCEY: Uh, well, I would rather not get into that here, but, uh, yes, there were some issues. The Governor appointed me to the State World’s Fair committee, and in that capacity I managed to work with the tribal chief. I worked between him and the Governor. It was essentially a spiritual solution, that was our common ground.

INTERVIEWER: Spiritual solution? What do you mean?

YANCEY: If your focus is a spiritual one then your interest is with the general welfare, not so much your own material advancement. We were not seeking to enhance our reputations or secure any kind of reward. We wanted the Fair to be successful; all of us.

INTERVIEWER: You mean you and the Governor and the tribal chief Ground Hog?

YANCEY: Yes. An accumulating of material goods, or fame, or recognition is futile. Nothing can touch the real issue which is old age, sickness, and our bodies turning to dust at death. There is nothing in the world more important than that. Well, Ground Hog was at odds with the Governor, and that was a problem, but when I looked at it I saw that we all wanted the same thing. Ground Hog didn’t want the gambling money, he wanted to return his people to their spiritual heritage, but he thought the money from the Indian casinos would give him the means to that. The Governor had other plans, but envisioned a same result. Once that was clear there was no longer an issue. Just about anything can be easily resolved when the intention of the players becomes clear. But when there is a selfish motivation, that is, when someone wants more wealth, or more fame and recognition than he wants others to have, then there is no resolution. This is why wars are fought.

INTERVIEWER: Wars are fought because some people are greedy, you’re saying.

YANCEY: Yes. But also because of misunderstandings. I think those are the only two reasons why we have wars. But if people were not greedy there would be no misunderstandings. The misunderstanding happen because people believe their adversary is being greedy, that’s all.

INTERVIEWER: We’ve about run out of time, This experience has been enlightening. Thank you, Yancey, and good luck with the World’s Fair project.

YANCEY: Thank you.

AUTHOR BIO:
Arthur Telling, born in San Francisco, California, grew up on the San Francisco peninsula, and presently resides across the bay in Oakland with his wife. A lifelong search for meaning and purpose in life, brought him to nearby Berkeley, with its rich metaphysical environment.  He has authored several novels, and has written numerous stories and articles. His articles have regularly appeared in online conscious lifestyle magazine OM Times (www.omtimes.com) including the January 2017-C issue “Jane Roberts, the Seth Books: An Overlooked Giant”  and August 2016-B issue “Son of Man May Not Have Been Jesus”. His article “A Different Jesus Message” was published in the November 2011 AMORC online Rosicrucian Digest. His article answering the question “How are the mind and brain related?” appeared in January/February 2008 edition of British Journal Philosophy Now. His website is www.arthurtelling.com

AUTHOR LINKS:

BUY LINKS:
AMAZON US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B06XJFF6WX
AMAZON UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B06XJFF6WX
AMAZON CA: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B06XJFF6WX
CREATESPACE: https://www.createspace.com/6920460


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10 comments:

  1. I'll be here on Books and Banter this late afternoon and all evening to discuss my book and answer any questions. Please feel free to comment about anything.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Do you believe a World's Fair would help bring peace to this world

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    2. Sure, such a shared world event will bring people to better understand one-another, particularly when it has a common them, such as learning about spiritualism and other religions as is this one in San Francisco (fiction at this juncture of course). I remember the Spokane, WA world's fair had a theme of the environment. The fair will naturally assist in building infrastructure that will last beyond the fair closing. In our case it is a comprehensive transit system serving Northern california.

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  2. Hi Yancey... I enjoyed reading your life and how you are accomplishing your everyday experiences. Although you mentioned you were in a miserable, sounds rather blah, life style. Is your goal to becoming a happier person only through finding enlightenment?

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    Replies
    1. We generally must have goals and expectation of a bright future, if we're to be happy. I didn't like my job until the world's fair event fell into my lap. That alone has changed my attitude, and I look forward to learning about native American and Asian religions, at the fair.

      Thanks all of you for taking time to comment.

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  3. Yancey, do you have a specific religion? Wouldn't the different religions all have some form of enlightenment depending on how they are studied by teachers, ministers, priests, etc. What is different about your journey?

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  4. Yes, different religions have different methods. Studying them I find there is a convergence; end goal is self-awareness, where we have broken off from the herd, from pre-programmed behavior, and begin to understand how our actions today are building our future present, and in being attentive to the world around us. A self-aware person will almost never make a mistake, being cognizant of how his behavior will affect him tomorrow, lingering on. To be perfect is the Christian goal, for Buddhists it is to become fully self-aware, obtaining enlightenment. In Jungian psychology it is becoming aware of your inner self, and how this hidden self communicates through dreams. It all points to self-awareness, realizing your unlimited potential by gaining better control and stability of the mind. Hindus say it as balancing meditation and action, acting while meditating and meditating while acting.

    The methods range from stilling the mind through mental exercise, to learning wisdom-knowledge academically, and also through devotion. Different ways and methods converge into a single goal, paths to it being generally similar.

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  5. I enjoyed your novel. Yancey Gates and the other characters were well played. I think many could relate to Yancey's work enviroment. I am questioning Yancey's unusual adventures. Interesting & exciting but did he go into a dream or subconscious state? Was this a journey opening a door to enlightenment? I couldn't put the book down as it caught my interest. Also the idea of a World Fair to bring nations together was so unique.

    Thanks for the informative responses.

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  6. Thanks for your kind remarks. I put in the fiction spinoffs to emphasize the thin line between real experiences and the imagination. I made effort to work these stories in (which I had actually written earlier) on the idea that Yancey was writing them for his book, being he is a writer, in the story line. I was working at the Richmond, California, marina at the time I wrote those stories, and regularly had lunch at Salutes, an Italian restaurant at the marina, just a 5 minute walk from my job. Richmond City Hall (as in the novel) actually is located there, but I was working for a nearby manufacturing company. Writing the stories gave me an escape from the real, boring, 9-5 daily grind, and I wanted readers to experience it. So, my intent in the book was that Yancey had an active imagination and was dreaming up all those events, and writing them down in HIS book. But dreams are often the same. As we get more in touch with our inner selves, as we awaken to the greater reality, our dreams will become more vivid and the distinction between waking and dreaming will become less. I see this as progress, a measurable yardstick toward gauging our awakening mind. With this, we'll become more in touch with the after-death experience and should lose our fear of death as we learn we can manipulate our outer world in this way.

    The World's Fair idea is intended as a kick-off, or method toward, the creating of a "two paths" society, developed in two of my books, Isaac's Two Sons, and again in Yancey. I think this is the way to world peace, where we have a free-market and a spiritual path, not competing, being complimentary to each other, where anyone who wants to work can work, and who doesn't want to work doesn't have to and will have basic necessities provided by churches and non-profits, and so can pursue their dreams, be they material wealth, spiritual development, or rest and education. I foresee the fair as a tool toward that end, from which the infrastructure will more quickly develop.

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  7. Arthur,thank you for being here and answering your fan's questions. I seldom see such interaction between author and reader. It warms my heart!

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Thank you for taking the time to visit and comment. I appreciate your input.