Join the Gurdjieff Society for a Special Event for 2025
Introductory Meetings
The ideas
The music
The movements
Please use contact form and we will be in touch with our schedule.
Join the Gurdjieff Society of Washington DC's
Outreach Group for “Conversations Over Coffee"
The Gurdjieff Society of Washington DC is reaching out. If you are interested in inner work, spirituality, and learning more about the ideas of G.I. Gurdjieff, we invite you to join the Outreach Group’s Friday morning "Conversations Over Coffee".
Sessions occurring bi-weekly. Contact us at [email protected] for locations and schedule.
Visit this website again in the future, or follow the Society on Facebook, to find out about additional Outreach opportunities.
Conversations Over Coffee are open, casual conversations and touch on topics such as:
We may include short readings, quiet sittings, or work with sensation during our conversations.
Email [email protected] of you have questions or need further information.
Sessions occurring bi-weekly. Contact us at [email protected] for locations and schedule.
Visit this website again in the future, or follow the Society on Facebook, to find out about additional Outreach opportunities.
Conversations Over Coffee are open, casual conversations and touch on topics such as:
- Sensation as a ground for attention.
- Transformation from a sleeping machine to a conscious being
- Connection between my inner and outer life
- Working with others toward objective reality
- Purpose and meaning of life
We may include short readings, quiet sittings, or work with sensation during our conversations.
Email [email protected] of you have questions or need further information.
"Attention in it's active form is inseparable from interrogation; it is essentially, in it's purity, an active questioning. This act is a privilege of our human existence. An animal contents itself with being. The responsibility of a man is to question himself on the meaning of his being."
Michel de Salzmann
"The point is to reestablish what has been lost, not to acquire anything new.
This is the purpose of development."
G. I. Gurdjieff
Michel de Salzmann
"The point is to reestablish what has been lost, not to acquire anything new.
This is the purpose of development."
G. I. Gurdjieff