Search posterous

Search all posts and users. Type a name, type a favorite song title, whatever! See what comes up.
  

More posterous blogs











More recommended blogs »

Here are posterous posts filed under maharishimaheshyogi...

maharishi says...

African American women greatly improved their condition of dyslipidemia through the practice of the Transcendental Meditation® technique, according to a new study conducted by researchers at MUM’s Institute for Natural Medicine and Prevention, Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta, and Howard University Hospital and College of Medicine in Washington, DC.

 

Photo1

MUM faculty member and trustee
Carolyn King Ph.D.

 
Dyslipidemia is the most common complication of diabetes, characterized by low HDL (good) cholesterol and high triglyceride levels, which increase the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD).

The 12-month study involved 49 diabetic African American women, aged between 55 and 85 years, who were randomly allocated to a Transcendental Meditation program group or to a health-education group focusing on diet and exercise. The Transcendental Meditation group showed a 29% greater increase in HDL (good) cholesterol and a 20% greater drop in triglycerides than subjects in the diet and exercise group at the end of the trial period.

Carolyn King, Ph.D., lead author of the study, recently presented the research at the American Public Health Association’s Annual Meeting and Exposition in Philadelphia.

“Stress reduction with the Transcendental Meditation program is both feasible and effective in reducing diabetic dyslipidemia in African American woman and it can be an important part of a lifestyle modification program for improving diabetic dyslipidemia and preventing CVD,” said Dr. King, professor of health and physiology at Maharishi University of Management.

The group practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique showed a 29% greater increase in HDL (good) cholesterol

About twice as many African American women suffer from CVD and diabetes as white women, and psychosocial stress contributes to the risk of diabetes and diabetes complications especially CVD. Combining the Transcendental Meditation technique with changes to diet and exercise may produce an even greater benefit.

Other coauthors include Robert Schneider, M.D., Maxwell Rainforth, Ph.D., Ken Walton, Ph.D., Otelio Randall, M.D., John Salerno, Ph.D., Sanford Nidich, Ed.D., Charlie Harris, Ph.D., Shichen Xu, M.D., and Gregory Strayhorn, M.D.

Photo2

The group practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique showed a 29% greater increase in HDL (good) cholesterol

 

Photo3

The group practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique showed a 20% greater drop in triglycerides

 

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

Meditation may lower BP and college stressors

Wed Nov 18, 2009 4:20pm EST

By Joene Hendry

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - If the stresses of college have put you at risk for high blood pressure, try transcendental meditation.

Blood pressure fell among college students who spent about 20 minutes at least once a day to reach the "restful alertness" state of transcendental meditation, Dr. Sanford I. Nidich, at Maharishi University of Management Research Institute in Maharishi Vedic City, Iowa, and colleagues report.

Their study, in the American Journal of Hypertension, found meditating students also had "reduced psychological distress, anxiety, and depression," Nidich told Reuters Health in an email.

He and colleagues randomly assigned 298 healthy students with and without high blood pressure to transcendental meditation training or to a training wait list. The students, 40 percent men, were just under 26 years old on average and attended universities in and around Washington, D.C.

Among the 207 students still participating in the study 3 months later, those in the meditation group had slight reductions in blood pressure, while the wait-listed students had slight increases in average blood pressure from the start of the study.

The meditating students also showed greater reductions in overall mood disturbances, anxiety, depression, anger, and hostility, and better coping skills compared with baseline measures and wait-listed students.

Nidich's team further assessed a subgroup of 48 meditating and 64 wait-listed students who initially had high blood pressure (above 130 over 85 millimeters of mercury) or were at risk for high blood pressure.

In this high-blood-pressure-risk group, the meditating students had blood pressures that were lower, on average, than at the start of the study, while the wait-listed students had increases in blood pressure.

Nidich and colleagues also found these "significant reductions" in blood pressure correlated with lower measures of psychological distress and greater coping measures.

The researchers suggest their findings warrant further investigations into the potential health benefits of longer-term transcendental meditation in college students.

SOURCE: American Journal of Hypertension, December 2009

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

More evidence that Transcendental Meditation helps the heart

November 18, 2009 |  6:00 am

Meditation Transcendental Meditation has been around for many years and is perhaps the most scientifically tested of all forms of meditation. Two studies presented this week add to the evidence that this form of stress reduction benefits people with heart disease and those at high risk for it.

One study, presented on Monday at the American Heart Assn.'s annual meeting, found that heart disease patients who practice TM have almost 50% lower rates of heart attacks, stroke and deaths compared to similar patients who don't practice meditation. The study was funded with a $3.8-million grant from the federal government and was conducted at the Medical College of Wisconsin in collaboration with the Institute for Natural Medicine and Prevention at Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, a major center of TM research.

The study followed African American men and women over nine years. The participants were randomly assigned to practice the stress-reducing TM technique or attend traditional health education classes on heart disease prevention.

The results of TM were so striking, it was as if the participants who meditated were taking a new class of medications, the authors said.

"Previous research on Transcendental Meditation has shown reductions in blood pressure, psychological stress, and other risk factors for heart disease, irrespective of ethnicity," the lead author of the study, Dr. Robert Schneider, said in a news release. "But this is the first controlled clinical trial to show that long-term practice of this particular stress reduction program reduces the incidence of clinical cardiovascular events."

In the second study, published today in the American Journal of Hypertension, researchers found that TM was an effective tool to reduce blood pressure, anxiety, depression and anger among college students at risk for high blood pressure.

Scientists at American University in Washington, D.C., and Maharishi University randomly assigned 298 students to either learn TM techniques or remain on a waiting list for the class. After three months, the students practicing TM had reductions of 6.3 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg) in systolic blood pressure and 4.0 mm Hg in diastolic. The reductions translate to a 52% lower risk of developing hypertension in later years. The students also showed improvements in psychological distress and coping.

-- Shari Roan

Photo: The meditation room at UCI Medical Center. Credit: Bob Chamberlin  /  Los Angeles Times

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

Reduce crime, violence, and war with a small group collectively practicing Transcendental Meditation and its Advanced Technique. The group can be as small as the square root of 1% of your countries population!

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

"Dear Prudence" is a song written by John Lennon and credited to Lennon/McCartney. It was initially performed by The Beatles and is the second track on the 1968 double-disc album The Beatles (also known as "The White Album"). It was recorded in one take at Abbey Road on 28 August 1968.

The song is about actress Mia Farrow's sister, Prudence, who was present when the Beatles visited Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in India. Prudence, focused on meditation, stayed in her room for the majority of their stay. Lennon, who was worried that she was depressed, wrote this song for her, inviting her to "come out to play". While the Beatles left the course, Mia, Prudence, Mike Love of the Beach Boys, and others, stayed and became Transcendental Meditation (or TM) teachers.

Prudence now teaches elementary school along with her husband, and they both still practice TM, and advanced versions of it, and may still teach TM.

This song, along with the preceding track "Back in the U.S.S.R.", features Paul McCartney on drums rather than Ringo Starr, who had recently walked out. Starr returned after the recording of this song to find flowers waiting for him on his drumkit.

Lennon considered this song to be one of his favorite Beatles songs, and his son Julian Lennon has named it his favorite.

In 1987, Lennon's original handwritten copy of the lyrics was sold at auction for $19,500.

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

The Shirodhara massage offers deep relaxation and inner harmony as a soothing continuous flow of herbalized oil is poured slowly and gently across your forehead. Your entire nervous system will relax and experience increasing balance and calm.

The Maharishi Ayurveda Health Center in Lancaster is housed in a mansion designed by Guy Lowell, the architect of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

The Ayurvedic cuisine at the center is vegetarian and mostly organic, and often vegan.

One of the guest room at the center.

Ayurvedic expert Jagdish Vaidya takes the pulse of a visitor.

The grand staircase at the Maharishi Ayurveda Health Center.

At the center, women and men are treated in separate areas.

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

LANCASTER - If your budget says "staycation" but you dream of exploring the healing mysteries of India, take heart -- the Maharishi Ayurveda Health Center is closer than the airport.

Blending the best of healing practices and spa-like treatments with privacy and luxurious accommodations, the center is the ultimate destination for health and relaxation. Unlike a conventional spa vacation -- which is all about pampering -- the center's focus in on improving your health from the inside out.

"Ayurveda involves deep seasonal cleansings," said general manager Ronald Decter. "It emphasizes prevention. Prevention is superior to cure in every way.

"A lot (of diseases) are influenced by our diet and neglect. Ayurveda is different; it's all about detecting, determining and eliminating the root cause," he said.

The Maharishi Ayurveda Health Center inhabits a historic 110-year-old mansion, and its 200-plus secluded acres offer guests plenty to explore. Its 16 guest rooms are unique and elegantly furnished, with Internet access and televisions in every room plus private baths. This is no spartan retreat with dorm-style living.

But the true emphasis of any stay at the center is the natural medicine of Ayurveda, a traditional and ancient practice from India.

One of the first things guests do is visit the center's resident Ayurvedic expert, Jagdish Vaidya. That consultation includes Vaidya taking the pulse of visitors, an ancient diagnostic tool practiced by very few today. Vaidya then customizes a program that will be strictly followed including dietary recommendations and treatments.

Interestingly, the word vaidya also means Ayurvedic doctor. Many of Vaidya's ancestors were Ayurvedic physicians. Strictly speaking, one might call him Vaidya Vaidya (as in "Dr." Vaidya).

Daniel Jolicoeur, head technician in the men's center, said treatment usually begins with a full body oil massage to loosen impurities in the cells.

"The second step will be heat treatment," he said. "It could be herbalized heat bath, could be dry or heat with steam.

"The purpose is to improve circulation," he said. This is usually followed by an herbal enema to help eliminate toxins, then a shower.

Yes, enema. Elimination is very important in Ayurveda.

But back to the massage.

"Application is almost always administered with four hands," said Decter. The Abhyanga, for example, is a full-body massage with herbalized oils given by a two-person synchronized team, and often the first treatment a visitor receives.

"The massage is really a preparation for (other treatments)," said Decter.

Next might follow a Shirodhara, a deliciously relaxing treatment where a stream of oil is slowly poured back and forth across the forehead. It is thought to provide deep relaxation of the entire nervous system.

In separate treatment centers, men only administer treatments to men, and women to women.

Ayurveda takes a whole-body approach, inside and out. There nothing that jump starts the body like a pure base, said Andrea York, public relations manager for the center. "The obstacles to (guests') own success are removed. You can't make a significant change until you remove these obstacles."

The gourmet food is mainly organic, easily digestible and strictly vegetarian, often vegan. Teas and supplements are also available. Some dishes may be prescribed for particular guests and, if so, will be in separate tureens at the buffet table with the guest's name on it.

Visitors typically stay five to seven days, said York, but some stay longer -- weeks or a month. Day treatment and weekend packages are also available.

Often, the spa experience is all about what you do when you're there, York said. Today, people are looking for a more knowledge-based approach with a fundamental change at the end of the stay.

"We put a lot of attention on what people are going back to, and realistic things to bring back to your life," she said.

"It's not a system to learn, it's just an 'aha,"' said York. "It's all about just coming back to what you are."

IF YOU GO

Maharishi Ayurveda Health Center is at 679 George Hill Road, Lancaster.

Day treatments range from $105 to $450. Rates per person for residential stays of seven to 21 days are $699 to $1,244 per day; accommodations, when available, are $285 per night. Day treatment guests not spending the night may add a buffet lunch for $25. Weekend packages are under development along with visiting lecture programs.

For more information, visit www.lancasterhealth.com, e-mail info@lancasterhealth.com or call 877-890-8600 toll-free.

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

Punjab Newsline

Maj. Gen. Kulwant Singh and Dr. David Leffler   
Wednesday, 11 November 2009

Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh said: "We need a neighbourhood where peace, progress and stability are ensured. We are worried at the rising terrorism in Afghanistan and Pakistan."  This is clearly an important goal. But how can it be achieved in today's hate-filled, high-tension political climate?

Diplomacy and economic sanctions likewise have not been sufficient to resolve the crisis-which is driven by human behavioral dynamics that cannot be controlled by such methods alone. 

War and conflict are human problems requiring human solutions. The underlying cause of conflict is accumulated social stress. Today the military of India has an opportunity to address this fundamental cause of war by deploying a new, scientifically verified technology of defence.

A New Solution 

This new technology of defence is based upon the latest discoveries in the fields of physics, neuroscience, and physiology. Ultimately, it is based on the discovery of the unified field of all the laws of nature-the most fundamental and powerful level of nature's dynamics. Technologies based upon this unified field of natural law have such concentrated power that they can render obsolete and irrelevant every previous objective technology and destructive means of defence.

Modern science has probed deeper levels of nature's functioning, from the macroscopic world of classical physics to the underlying atomic, nuclear, and subnuclear levels, culminating in the discovery of the unified field, the unified source of the diversified laws of nature governing the universe. Because this unified field is vastly more powerful than any other level of nature's dynamics, a technology of defence based upon the unified field is of historic importance. It is already changing the whole science and technology of defence.

Accessing the Unified Field Within

Since the unified field is the source of the objective world, its power cannot be harnessed through objective technologies.  A new approach is needed-one that draws upon the world's subjective traditions of meditation. Properly understood and property practiced, meditation throughout the ages has been a systematic technology to turn human awareness within to experience finer levels of thought, deeper levels of human intelligence that correspond to deeper levels of intelligence in nature. This inward exploration culminates in direct experience of the deepest level of consciousness-the simplest, silent, settled state of human awareness, sometimes called the state of pure consciousness-in which the human mind identifies with the unified field. By turning the attention systematically within, human awareness explores deeper levels of nature's functioning and ultimately experiences the unified field at the source of thought-the field of unity at the basis of mind and matter. 

The Vedic tradition of knowledge from India is the most complete and highly developed tradition of meditation in the world, yet this ancient approach of gaining knowledge and experience of the unified field has become the focus of intense scientific research over the past 50 years. The late Maharishi Mahesh Yogi revived, from the ancient Vedic science of consciousness, systematic technologies for experiencing the unified field, including the Transcendental Meditation program and its advanced techniques. These meditation practices are known as Invincible Defence Technology (IDT) in military circles and have been successfully applied by members of many faiths to eliminate conflict in the recent past. If the military of India were to apply this human resource-based technology, which is non-lethal and non-destructive, it could reduce the collective societal stress that is fueling the rising tensions between India and Pakistan.

The Prevention Wing

A Prevention Wing of the Military would be the ideal way to achieve this goal. Less than 1% of the military of India would participate in this wing. The remaining personnel would carry out their normal military duties. The Prevention Wing would be trained in the primary components of IDT. They would practice these technologies in large groups, morning and evening.

The Maharishi Effect

Over 50 research studies confirm that when the required threshold of IDT experts is crossed-approximately the square root of 1% of the size of a given population-crime goes down in the affected population, quality of life indices go up, and war and terrorism abate. Scientists have named this phenomenon the Maharishi Effect in honor of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who first predicted it. The causal mechanism appears to be a field effect of consciousness-a spillover effect on the level of the unified field from the peace-creating group into the larger population.

For instance, in 1993, a two-month Maharishi Effect intervention was implemented and studied in Washington, DC. Predictions of specific drops in crime and other indices were lodged in advance with government leaders and newspapers. The research protocol was approved by an independent Project Review Board. The findings showed that crime fell 23.3 percent below the predicted level when the peace-creating group reached its maximum size. Temperature, weekend effects, or previous trends in the data failed to account for changes. This research was published in the peer-reviewed Social Indicators Research (1999, vol. 47, 153-201). 

The Maharishi Effect was documented on a global scale in a study using Rand Corporation data and published in the Journal of Offender Rehabilitation (2003, vol. 36, 283-302). When assemblies of IDT experts exceeded the Maharishi Effect threshold for the world (about 7,000 at that time) during the years 1983-1985, terrorism globally decreased 72%, international conflict decreased 32%, and violence in nations was reduced without intrusion by other governments.

The Opportunity for Permanent Peace

The military of India is charged with the constitutional responsibility to defend the country. It can now succeed in this mission simply by creating a Prevention Wing of the Military - a coherence-creating group of IDT experts exceeding the square root of 1% of the population of India - approximately 3,415 soldiers.

As part of its responsibility to protect the nation, India's military is obligated to thoroughly examine realistic, scientifically proven methods for preventing war and terrorism. IDT is such a method. Moreover, since the military and military personnel are funded by the government, a Prevention Wing of the Military would not be subject to the fluctuations in size that often affect civilian IDT groups, where participation may be influenced by finances, job demands, graduations, and optional activities. 

All areas of society will be simultaneously enriched by this holistically life-supporting, life-benefiting technology. It is enormously effective and cost-effective, and the results are immediate. All that is necessary is to provide the proper training for a group of military personnel-or indeed, any large group within the country. India has the opportunity today through IDT to create national security, invincibility, and peace. But the time for Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh to act is now.

About the Authors:

Major General (R) Kulwant Singh, UYSM., PhD, leads an international group of generals and defence experts that advocates Invincible Defence Technology.

David Leffler, PhD, a US Air Force veteran, is the executive director at the Center for Advanced Military Science (CAMS). http://www.StrongMilitary.org

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

Architect brings ancient Vedic principle to designing

By MELISSA DASSRATH Sunday, November 8 2009

Imagine if the subtle dimensions of a structure or the strategic placement of a doorway, could inexplicably usher in good fortune and resonate harmony in your life. Architect David Fojo follows Indian Vastu Vedic principles when drafting his building plans in order to increase the happiness, wealth, health, and prosperity of the people who live and work in the home or office space he has designed.

Fojo, 54, of Cascade, obtained his bachelors degree in architecture from Pratt Institute in New York. But it was while he continued his studies in Art and Architecture and Engineering at Brown University in Rhode Island, that he was introduced to the transcendental meditation (www.tm.org) that would transform his thinking.

Initially he started practising meditation to ease exam stress, but then he began experiencing the benefits of it. That motivated Fojo to delve deeper into a study of the Vedas (the ancient Indian text upon which Hinduism was created) and ayurvedic healing (which uses herbs, massage and yoga as a form of medicinal treatment).

“A major influence on my professional life has been learning from the ancient design philosophies of the world. I was first introduced to the science of Vastu or Sthapatya Veda when I was studying at Brown University in the early ‘70s and I have been a student of it ever since. I have tried to integrate the wisdom of the ancient masters into the modern architectural practice.”

Fojo went on to obtain his Master’s Degree from the Yale University School of Architecture in Connecticut. Then in 1986, he moved to the idyllic town of Fairfield in Iowa to learn about the principles and practice of Maharishi Sthapatya Veda (www.fortunecreatingbuildings.com).

Sthapatya Veda or Vastu Shastra is the ancient Hindu system of architecture developed by the mythical sage Mamuni Mayan. It is a science of structure that correlates the design of a building with the natural laws that structure the universe. In so doing, Vastu aims to bring about an auspicious alignment that produces physiological and psychological benefits to the individual as well as improving their general well-being.

Vastu uses various mathematical and diagrammatic theories to design a floor plan. Thus, the blueprint is made up of sectors of a Mandala (quadrangle) which is a metaphysical plan of the building that incorporates the course of the heavenly bodies and supernatural forces.

“It’s a very ancient design philosophy,” says Fojo. “In fact, some people trace it as far back as 10,000 years. The great saint Maharishi Mayan was the first great Sthapati (architect). People believed that he reached a higher state of consciousness and so he was worshiped as a demigod. They believed that in order to be a great architect you had to be a great saint. That your consciousness had to be highly developed in order to perceive spaces and the impact it would have on people.”

Fojo explained that Vastu allowed Fairfield to flourish. Not only were the people healthier and more contented, but the businesses were showing growth: “Fairfield is one of the more important experiments worldwide in developing new towns from scratch. Every aspect of the north part of the town has been developed from the ground up using the principles of the Vedas and it is an absolutely marvelous place with an extraordinary feeling of harmony. The town layout and all the buildings have been designed using Maharishi Sthapatya Veda. The health and medical facilities use the Vedic principles of Ayurveda, Vedic agriculture is used to make the town almost self-sufficient for food, and in general Vedic philosophy permeates all aspects of the design and running of the town. The town is based on green and sustainable building and sets a good example by generating large amounts of alternative energy for a significant portion of its needs.”

Fojo spent six years helping to create this town using the Vastu Veda concepts and green building techinques. He also had the opportunity to experience the pervading sense of peace from living and working in the Vastu buildings of a Vastu town.

Fojo further studied Vastu under the tutorship of Dr Ganapati Sthapati, who is credited for the resurgence of Vastu in the field of architecture. He comes from an illustrious line of Sthapatis that have designed and built temples and other structures going back thousands of years. Fojo followed Dr Ganapati to India and New Mexico.

After being exposed to Eastern philosophy he changed his approach to architecture. Fojo became convinced that the Vedic architects or Sthapatis, knew important things about creating ideal buildings that Western architects were unaware of. The axiom of Vastu is that a well-structured building has the power to generate harmony, to heal and to create prosperity that the conventional western architect could not conceive of. During this time he began integrating this Vedic knowledge into a system of practical modern architecture that had much more benefits than conventional architecture.

“According to Vastu, there are divine laws of sacred geometry, rhythms, sub-rhythms and resonance that are linked to where the entrance of a building should be, for instance. Because certain mathematical ratios, proportions and dimensions produce the right kind of energy. The ancient Sthapatis predicted benefits that are only now being confirmed by modern science. Vastu is proven to result in better sleep; better communication and relationships; better sense of well being and happiness; improved health and increased prosperity. ”

He explained that something as simplistic as the different qualities of daylight at the different times of day can affect their suitability for certain functions and not others. When a space is enclosed using the right proportions it begins to resonate at a certain frequency and may become a living entity itself.

Fojo explained that this resonance can be made harmonious and supportive for the occupants by entering the space at a certain point; or made disharmonious and chaotic by entering at the wrong point. He noted that general principles related to the layout of a building: “There are specific functions that should be located in certain parts of the building. For example, the kitchen of a home should be in the south east corner of the home. Also, the Sthapatis knew how to align buildings with the earth’s powerful electromagnetic fields of various kinds to create overall coherent energy in the building. Generally, it is favoured to align the walls of a building with True North (not Grid or Magnetic North) and sometimes there are corrections to be made for various situations.”

So when he established Fojo Design and Development Limited on Park Street, Port-of-Spain he began using Vedic architectural theories to create Vastu design of multi-storey complexes. The style of architecture, however, is a matter of personal choice. So that, a Vastu building can draw its inspiration from Eastern Oriental influences or it can have very futuristic elements. Two of Dr Ganapati’s most senior architect “disciples” are among his staff members and collaborate with him closely on various projects. Fojo has created Vastu design for Flow, towers for the Amar Group of Companies and a conceptual design of a butterfly exhibit for e-Teck.

Recently, the company started offering Vastu home plans of several prototype designs because Fojo was motivated to make the benefits of Vastu more available and more affordable. The blueprints include everything from the construction materials to electrical and plumbing.

He said, “We have created a line of Sthapatya Vedic or ‘Green’ homes which are now being launched to the public. There are about ten home designs to choose from, ranging from the 900 square foot starter home, through middle income homes and including a few luxury home designs. Most homes have versions that have been customised to take maximum advantage of whether the house faces east, west, north or south. Clients can request to modify the plans to suit their needs or their site and we are happy to do that. The cost for a full set of working drawings is from $2,400 and up.”

The principles of Vastu have been applied since ancient times to the construction of temples, forts, palaces, town and city layout of India. He added that Lord Buddha was taught Vastu Veda and after his enlightenment he spread this teaching to China and Japan and it evolved into Feng Shui. “The concepts of Vastu and Feng Shui are eternal truths. They are spiritual-scientific laws of the universe.”

These basic geometric forms have a great deal of power in them. So that the square that is that foundation for a building can be calming and create order. Fojo encourages people to consider making the change to Vastu to eliminate the disorder and disharmony in their lives.

 

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi

maharishi says...

James McCartney, son of former Beatle Paul McCartney, will play his American debut concert Nov. 14 at Maharishi University in Fairfield, Iowa. The younger McCartney will perform during the fourth annual David Lynch “Change Begins Within” Weekend, Nov. 13 to 16. Also performing will be Donovan, who joined the Beatles in Rishikesh. Blueser Laura Dawn and her group The Little Death will fill out the bill.

The concert comes a little more than 40 years after James' father, Paul McCartney, traveled to Rishikesh, India, to study Transcendental Meditation with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.

“James has a way with melody and a set of pipes, which are more than a match for his dad’s,” a recent article in the UK Sun declared.

In a statement issued for the concert, he said this is something he's been working towards for a while.

Continue to read this story on www.examiner.com

Filed under: maharishi mahesh yogi