see also >>>Â http://www.davidlynchfoundation.org/
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McCartney says meditation helped stabilize Beatles
by Michelle Nichols
Reuters   4 April 2009
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The surviving members of the Beatles, Paul McCartney and
Ringo Starr, will perform at a concert on Saturday to raise funds to help
children learn a meditation technique McCartney said helped stabilize the band
at the height of its fame.
McCartney and Starr will perform separate sets at the 'Change Begins Within'
concert for the David Lynch Foundation, which helps people learn Transcendental
Meditation.
The Beatles helped popularize Transcendental Meditation—described as a simple
mental technique that combats stress—in 1967 when they sought spiritual
guidance from an Indian guru, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
'It was a great gift that Maharishi gave us,' McCartney told a news conference
on Friday to promote the concert. 'For me, it came at a time when we were
looking for something to kind of stabilize us toward the end of the crazy '60s.'
'It's a lifelong gift. It's something you can call on at any time,' he said. 'I
think it's a great thing it's actually coming into the mainstream.'
Starr also described Transcendental Meditation as a gift and that since learning
it more than 40 years ago 'sometimes a lot and sometimes a little I have
meditated.'
The lineup for the concert at famed Radio City Music Hall also includes Sheryl
Crow, Donovan, Pearl Jam singer Eddie Vedder, blues-folk musician Ben Harper and
techno star Moby.
Filmmaker David Lynch's foundation says that since 2005 it has provided
scholarships for more than 100,000 at-risk young people, teachers and parents in
30 countries to learn Transcendental Meditation.
The concert is intended to raise funds toward the foundation's goal of helping a
million children learn to meditate.
'I feel like I'm at a meeting of meditators anonymous,' Moby joked. 'I just
learned T.M. recently . . . .'
'. . . . one of the things that impressed me about T.M. . . . was its
simplicity,' he said. 'It's a simple practice that calms the mind.'
(Editing by Mark Egan and Will Dunham)
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