Bucky's Mind



Psychic Phenomena on Vimeo

I've been spending a lot of time lately with a late-70's interview with Buckminster Fuller, conducted at the end-range of his life and career by a really inspiring Los Angeles public-access television figure called Damien Simpson, who apparently died shortly after the airing of this segment. This interview, it seems, is only available on a DVD called "Buckminster Fuller: The Lost Interviews," along with a handful of other late-era New Age television segments. Bucky loses his marbles progressively throughout the interviews, but manages to say some pretty unforgettable things about his certainty in the afterlife and the will of the Universe in deciding the course of his career.

It's the kind of thing that makes me wonder if Buckminster Fuller wasn't just a crazy person with a total commitment to action. Some other notable Fuller interviews can be seen here and here.

"One of the most important things to me in my commitment was that I never become the head of a cult. I must always remember, 'it's just a little me.' I'm not a special messiah."

-- Buckminster Fuller

Tags

More like this

"Wanting to be someone else is a waste of the person you are." -Kurt Cobain Back in the early 1990s, not only a new sound, but also a new attitude emerged in Rock 'n' Roll. One that was dark and heavy, one that expressed the frustration and malaise of youth, and one that -- perhaps surprisingly --…
Life has two contradictory properties that any theory explaining its origin must encompass: similarities everywhere, and differences separating species. So far, the only theory that covers both beautifully and explains how one is the consequence of the other is evolution. Common descent unites all…
There are times when I'm wrong again and again. No, I'm certainly not referring to my writings about vaccines which, as much as anti-vaccine loons like to claim they're wrong, are not. Nor am I referring to my writings about "complementary and alternative medicine" (CAM) or "integrative medicine" (…
No, that's not a phalanx of nuclear power plants in Harlem - it's a futuristic housing concept proposed in 1964 by visionary Buckminster Fuller and his student Shoji Sadao. The 100-story residential skyscrapers would hold 45,000 occupants each. Fuller and Sadao also proposed a two-mile wide dome…

Um, also, I can't tell if you are making fun of Buckminster Fuller or not, but he actually had a really intense life, and he's right about everything.

ps - thanks for posting the interview!

Andrew, I know. I'm making a dome of out twigs and superglue in the kitchen right now. Sometimes, I think, you need to be a little bit nuts to do what needs to be done.

Yes, exactly. Your post caused me to revisit the introductory lecture to the 42-hour "Everything I Know," and what he says about everything being natural, we just can't comprehend the scope and capacity of nature.... it was blowing my mind.

Because it's crazy.

he's right about everything.

Everything? That's pretty messiah-like belief in the man.

Sometimes, I think, you need to be a little bit nuts to do what needs to be done.

I seem to have become unwittingly involved in a project like that. It doesn't pay, the hours are nuts and I've passed up one or two career opportunites because my current paying job is stable and offers me a reasonable amount of flex time for shenaigans like that.

I prefer 'stubborn'.

all i can say, is that the more work i do to reach my ultimate design, the crazier and crazier (and more articulate about it) i get.

p.s. i saw a geodesic dome in olympia on my bus ride from portland. a wolf was standing next to it. whatever he was, the northwest needs it.

Yeah, it's supposed to skip. Bucky never says anything! Psychic Phenomena! Get it?

Maybe I should stick to writing.

[here in Providence, there is a street called Westminster Street, but folks who've lived here all their lives mostly all say "WestmINIster". (as Damien Simpson called Bucky "'BuckmINIster' Fuller". ~Could this have been a calculated mispronunciation, similar {though skewing in the opposite moral direction} to Bush43's SODOM HUSSEIN? *probably not~ OMG I just did that thing, where all you have to do is SUGGEST that some awful thing might be the case, and POOF off goes the idea to wreak whatever havoc! oops, my bad.) I wonder if 'the 100th Monkey' theory could be brought usefully to bear on this question of common mis/pronunciations?*]

I saw this for the first time last night and I have to think that Bucky was a buddhist by nature, even if he didn't think so. His idea that the universe helps you because you are in line with it is very profound. And no I don't think he lost his marbles during his dialogue with Damien. I found him quite cogent and intelligible.
Gotta see the other interview on that DVD. I am rejuvenated!

Thank you for posting this. Not so much for Mr.Fuller, but for Damien Simpson.I used to watch his show in the 70's.It was like church to me.He was so ahead of his time.

Rita, wow! I can't find much information about Damien Simpson online...he seems like such an amazing character. What do you know about him?

Rita and Claire, Damien Simpson was and amazing person. He was also a wonderful teacher.

Bucky never lost his marbles in this interview as stated in your text. He was making perfect sense while conversing with a guy who only somewhat gets it. Wake up.

I saw the old 2 part interview with Damien Simpson too... my copy has an added-on piece from a few years later (early '80's?) with a co-host named Stacie. The show then had a different host who talked of Damien Simpson's "change in direction"???

There is a site for the "UMS" church, which he founded. How and when did he die?

My mother, Aunt and I knew Damien Simpson. My Aunt & mother hosted A.R.E. Meetings and were very active in the 'Metaphysical' community. We met him in 1967-8. He was lecturing at Stanford. Eventually several people (Bill Tiller arranged his lectures at Stanford, Helgie Stottrup designed the USMC cross & others like my aunt & mom) got together and opened the Los Altos USMC, which later moved to Mt View. Damien was a regular guest.

He was very vibrant, charismatic & insightful. He was a Catholic priest, or studying to be one, as I recall, before he founded USMC. He explored everything with an open mind. He loved music and attracted many talented young people. He channeled an entity - I believe named "Phillip" during his lectures & readings. I'm certain you can find recordings of his lectures & church services through the Long Beach USMC Church.

His health was failing even at that time. I do not know his specific health issues, other than he often suffered headaches, exhaustion, and had stomach problems.

Cusic -- amazing, thank you so much for the insight and information.