transcendental meditation

Lynn Collins is Ready to Blast-Off in the Epic ‘John Carter’ – Movies – BlackBook

All it took for Lynn Collins to give up her two-pack-a-day smoking habit was six weeks of acupuncture and a man named Kerry Gaynor. “He’s amazing,” says Collins of the certified hypnotist, who’s talked the likes of Matt Damon, Aaron Eckhart, and Charlize Theron into butting out once and for all. Collins got Gaynor’s phone number from her friend Rashida Jones, who got it from Paul Rudd. three sessions later, she was nicotine-free. “I haven’t had a cigarette since,” says Collins, “and that was three years ago.” Yet for all the credit due to the Gaynor method, Collins herself was well-prepared for the battle against cigarettes, having recently cast a much fiercer demon from her life.

In the winter of 2008, Collins was shooting the Marvel spin-off X-Men Origins: Wolverine in Australia opposite Hugh Jackman. Every morning, she came to set hungover after a night of heavy partying and binge drinking. “It was just a party everywhere because I met a lot of Australians and they’re so much fun,” says Collins, who is sitting in the lobby of the Bowery Hotel in Manhatttan, cradling a glass of sparkling water in her right hand. I ask how her punishing nightlife routine affected her demanding role as Kayla Silverfox, the telepathic mutant and love interest to Jackman’s Wolverine. “When you’re a functioning alcoholic, you can hide it,” she says. “And I was young enough that it didn’t show in my face. but it got to a point where somebody was like, it’s not cute anymore, and I was like, Oh God.”

Lynn Collins is not yet a household name, but that might change when Disney’s gargantuan sci-fi tentpole John Carter, in which Collins plays a martian princess, is released on March 9. For now, her struggles with alcoholism remain generally undocumented by the press. she is, however, remarkably candid for an actor whose last check was signed by the House That Mickey Built. “If I picked up one drink right now it would mean I’d be gone by the end of the night,” says Collins, who’s been sober for almost four years. “I never understood people who can have just one. I’m like, Don’t you want to get bombed?”

In 2008, Collins married the actor Steven Strait after a four-year relationship. Strait, who stars on the upcoming Starz series Magic City, was with her during her darkest hours, although in the beginning they were just a young couple having fun. “Until I took it all to hell,” says Collins, with surprising nonchalance. “Steven is incredibly smart and incredibly powerful, and he knows what he wants. Whatever I was doing, he was the rock, and now there’s two rocks. It’s a more equal relationship, but it wasn’t always like that.”

In person, Collins is bubbly and effervescent (In a moment of keen self-awareness, she tells me, “I don’t need bubbles to be effervescent”). she speaks as though she’s constantly sharing a secret, leaning in close across the table, and often lowers her voice to a whisper like she’s confessing to her best friend. she describes her newfound clarity as addictive and calls herself a workaholic. Between her two blockbusters, Collins shot the independent dramas Angels Crest, Unconditional, and Ten Year, but she seems frustrated that none had seen a theatrical release yet. just before we meet, she was glued to her iPad, tweeting obsessively about her new business, a webzine devoted to spirituality and fashion called InnerChic.org. Collins, who is launching the site with a close friend, is a hardcore fanatic of all things new Age.

she studies numerology, the I Ching, and tarot. When she left AA, she supplemented it with transcendental meditation, which she still practices twice a day. On the set of John Carter, a movie she calls “mind-expanding,” Collins gave her costar Taylor Kitsch an astrology reading. “My mom told me astrology came from the devil,” she says, explaining the origins of her fascination with the Zodiac. “And I was like, Really? you think this is from the devil? That is so interesting! I think there’s a part of my mother that will always wonder if I’m going to hell.”

Collins was born in Texas to Christian parents, but spent much of her childhood in Singapore after her father, an employee at Exxon, was transferred there. her eclectic, international upbringing set her up for serious culture shock when she returned to the U.S. at the age of 10. “I had been around all these different faces, different styles of worship, dress, and eating. then I get back to Texas, which is all Dooney & Bourke bags,” she says. At 17, Collins moved to new York City and enrolled in the prestigious Julliard drama school, where she devised a list of career goals. the first was to perform at the Public Theater, which she accomplished in 2000 after being cast as Ophelia in a production of Hamlet, starring Liev Schrieber. In 2005, she ticked off another goal: becoming the lead in a Shakespeare in the Park production, gracing the Delacorte stage as Rosalind in As you like It. her break in Hollywood came when she guest–starred on HBO’s True Blood as the vampy (but not vampiric) waitress Dawn Green. after the character was killed off during the show’s first season, Collins turned her attention to movies, landing a part in the underrated thriller Uncertainty, opposite Joseph Gordon-Levitt. but it was her role in X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which grossed $373 million worldwide, that gave Collins the clout to audition for John Carter.

Adapted from the Edgar Rice Burroughs Barsoom serial, John Carter marks Pixar genius Andrew Stanton’s live–action debut—and one of the largest gambles in Disney’s history. if the story of a former Confederate captain (played by Kitsch) who gets transported to Mars and involved in the planet’s civil war does not connect with audiences, it won’t come close to recouping its reported $250 million budget. Collins is confident the film will find a large audience, not because of its special effects (of which there are many) but because Stanton set out to make a movie with a poignant message. “Anything Andrew Stanton does is just so big,” Collins says. “Look at Wall-E. I don’t want to speak for him, but from witnessing his work and witnessing him as a person, he truly cares about human life, the planet, and our existence.”

For her role as the extraterrestrial warrior Dejah Thoris, the head of Science and Letters in the martian city of Helium, the five hours a day she spent getting bronzer and fake tribal prints applied to her body was the least rigorous part of Collins’ physical transformation. the actor endured weeks of sword training and brutal workout routines—because Burroughs’ martians have a famous aversion to clothes. “The costumes for John Carter were like blue booty shorts that go up my ass,” says Collins. “At one point I had to wear this chainmail belt and it was horrible. but I don’t see Dejah as someone who cares if her body is exposed, because she doesn’t see herself as an object.” but Collins gained more from her training than abs of steel. “Working out gave me a great high,” she says. “And I’m a connoisseur of highs.”

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by frees - March 27, 2012 at 1:22 am

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David Lynch loves transcendental meditation

We know filmmaker David Lynch for the dark surrealism of “Eraserhead,” “Blue Velvet,” “Inland Empire” and “Twin Peaks,” as well as for his deep, abiding love of coffee.

Lynch is also passionate about transcendental meditation, which he first took up “on a beautiful, sunny Saturday morning” in 1973. that passion spawned a book, “Catching the Big Fish,” and the David Lynch Foundation for Consciousness-Based Education and World Peace.

Lynch spoke about what TM means for him and why others should try it too.

Q: can you describe how you discovered TM?

A: I didn’t know anything about meditation, and I thought it was a waste of time. then I heard a phrase that true happiness is not out there, true happiness lies within. and I started thinking about that, and it had a ring of truth. it hit me that maybe meditation was the way to go within.

One day my sister called, and she said she started TM, and I heard a change in her voice — more happiness, more self-assuredness. and I said, “This is what I want.”

I was filled with an anger and sorrows and doubts and melancholy. and I took it out on my first wife. I made her life pretty much a hell. So I start transcendental meditation, and two weeks later she comes to me and says, “What is going on? This anger, where did it go?” Things lift away so naturally.

Q: your foundation started with introducing TM into schools. what changes have you seen in students who have been through the program?

A: they say stress is hitting kids at a younger and younger age. There’s violence, bullies, there’s very little learning, and it’s not fun to learn. (With TM) they get more intelligence, they have more creativity, more energy, more happiness, and then when the teacher says something, understanding is growing. the teachers say, “Now Billy can focus, and Suzy is just blossoming.” Kids start finding what they really love and finding a way to do it.

The foundation has now expanded to other realms, such as introducing TM to veterans and prisoners.

Prisoners get this technique and they get super, super happy. and they get this ability to pause before they do something.

So something that people say is, “Before I started meditating, I just reacted. now, with meditation, I have this pause and this reasoning: Do I really want to blow this man’s head off with a .357 Magnum in my hand?” and then the answer is, “No, I don’t think so.” they have time to think.

Q: is it hard to meditate in certain places?

A: You can do it anywhere. one of my best meditations was in kind of a little closet room with a wall that was by a sidewalk. all during my meditation, there was some guy jackhammering the concrete sidewalk. but as he jackhammered, it jiggled the bliss in me and I was just flying high. it was so beautiful.

Q: Are coffee and TM compatible?

A: For me, coffee and transcendental meditation go together like a horse and carriage. You don’t have to give up anything to do TM. I think most meditators go easy on the coffee, naturally.

I smoke cigarettes too, and most meditators say the urge to smoke kind of lifted away when they started meditating.

Not me! my urge to smoke got greater. I just love tobacco.

I eat pretty good, but I just love these things, and that’s the way it is.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by frees - at 12:44 am

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Excepteuropa Blog

(AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, file) following a stealthy six-hour visit to the Maharishi University in Fairfield, Iowa, Oprah Winfrey will tell the country about her newfound devotion to transcendental meditation Sunday night on the OWN network.

Dalio also really likes director David Lynch (“Blue Velvet,” “Twin Peaks”) and Transcendental Meditation. In 2010, he gave $1855000 to David Lynch's Consciousness Based Foundation in Fairfield, Iowa for the teaching of TM.

TM in many ways was a salvation as it was preventive medicine for aspects of my then personality that could have been a major obstacle to all achievements and relationships. I still meditate daily for the past 40 years, and I highly recommend this

Dalio also really likes director David Lynch (“Blue Velvet,” “Twin Peaks”) and Transcendental Meditation. In 2010, he gave $1855000 to David Lynch's Consciousness Based Foundation in Fairfield, Iowa for the teaching of TM.

Oprah's "next Chapter" show had an episode about transcendental meditation and all the effects of it. During the episode it showed several people that I respected that participated in this meditation which also sparked my

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by frees - March 26, 2012 at 5:22 pm

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