interviews
A Conversation
with Michael Lindfield on:
Life, Meaning,
Findhorn, and Transformation

Michael Lindfield is a senior consultant with
a major aerospace company where he works with innovative approaches
to large-scale change of business and "people" systems. He
is author of "The Dance of Change," in addition to
numerous articles on individual and organizational development, and
has presented at business, education and psychology conferences
around the world.
Michael was a 14-year resident of the Findhorn
Foundation - a spiritual community in the northeast of Scotland
dedicated to exploring new and viable ways of living together.
During his time at Findhorn, he worked as a gardener, Director of
Education and member of the Leadership Group. He finds renewal and
enjoyment in long-distance running and the piano works of Chopin,
Schubert, Mendelssohn and Haydn."

Tammie:
You’ve been very busy I understand.
Michael Lindfield:
Yes, but I’m not complaining.
Tammie:
Oh, good.
Michael Lindfield:
Ha (Laughs)
Tammie:
Great. Busy can be a very good thing. So Michael, what inspired you
to write the Dance of Change?
Michael Lindfield:
It was a number of things. When I was at Findhorn, I developed a
passion for education. Originally, I came to Findhorn as a gardener.
After working in the garden for about a year, I discovered there was
another part of myself wanting to be born - more of an
"educational" aspect. These two streams of gardening and
education came together to create powerful images about the world
around me and inside me. I began to receive insights about how
things hung together- the interdependency of Life. I had also
studied many of the theosophical writings, the writings of Alice A.
Bailey, and some of Rudolph Steiner’s philosophy.
All of these things were sort of mulling
around in my being. They were coming together and coalescing into my
own world picture. During those early years at Findhorn, I developed
a number of workshops that attempted to put the Ancient Wisdom into
a context that was accessible and relevant for today. These courses
were offered internally for the members and also as part of the
guest program. I used a fairly simple approach.
What I started to do was actually draw
pictures. I would draw little cartoon pictures of daily situations
in the life of an aspiring soul, such as confronting and embracing
one’s own shadow. Or what it means to be a world server. Or what
it means to be in relationship with the living earth. Or what
personal disarmament means – creating inner peace as a prelude to
outer peace.
I thought in images and scenarios and would
come up with these little cartoons. I put together about 300 of
these drawings with colored pens on acetate sheets, or view-foils.
Then I realized that each of these images probably had at least 1000
words of story behind them. Over the course of conducting the
workshops, I received a number of requests from people asking
whether the cartoons were available. Have you published anything and
do you intend to? I said "NO". I said "NO" for a
number of years. And then finally, several years later, I got a
sense of right timing about responding to those requests.
And that is one thing that I learned in the
garden, that everything has a season, has a timing built into it. I
could feel that things were coming to a head, it was like something
ripening on the vine. I had a sense that it was time to write a
book. Time to put my thoughts down on paper. And so, that’s what I
did. It took me four months of early morning sessions in my garden
shed with a typewriter to complete the manuscript. The book was
published just as I was about to leave Findhorn and make the move
out here to the United States. And so after all those years of not
responding, the timing now seemed to work all the way around.
And it was my way of bringing together
everything that was going on inside of me. It was really for two
reasons. One, was to finally put everything down on paper, so it
would be made visible and I could articulate my world-view. The
other reason was so that I could actually bring closure to this
phase of my life, leave it behind and move on.
Tammie: To
put it in perspective.
Michael Lindfield::
Yes, and I know it seems kind of selfish to say that the book was a
way to deposit my philosophical droppings - the remains of my
thought process – so I could move onto something else. It wasn’t
that I discarded or disowned anything - it was just that I wanted to
be free to explore what was next.
Tammie:
Absolutely.
Michael Lindfield:
One ritual of completion at Findhon was to actually write the book.
For me it was a rite of passage, literally a "write" of
passage. It felt "right to write," if you will pardon the
pun! So that’s what it took to put the book together and get it
published. That’s how it came about. I’m not sure what else I
can say about it.
Tammie:
Michael, you mentioned that you believe there is a time for
everything and I'm curious about how you knew it was time to leave
Findhorn?
Michael Lindfield:
Well, the same reason I knew it was time to come to Findhorn. In
1971 and 1972, I was working on a farm in Sweden and I was having
some very deep experiences in nature. And these experiences were
such that it was difficult for me to share them with my friends and
colleagues. The farming community was more of a back to nature green
wave expression, more socially and politically oriented than
religious or spiritual.
When I tried to share some of these deep inner
experiences I was having with the natural world, it was sort of
frowned upon as not being appropriate. And so I took a month off
during the summer and traveled down to Denmark. I went to stay at a
summer camp, arranged by a spiritual group founded upon the
teachings of a Dane called Martinus, who'd written a lot of material
about "spiritual science" as it was called.
There was somebody attending the camp at the
same time who had recently come from Scotland. This person had
visited a spiritual community called Findhorn and had some
photographs, books and a slide show. He showed the slide show in the
evening and talked about the experiment at Findhorn around
cooperation with nature – how humans were consciously working with
the angels and the nature spirits. And I went, "Oh my goodness,
this is what I’ve been experiencing. This is it. I have to go
there. This is my next move".
I had also been reading in Alice Bailey’s
"Letters on Occult Meditation" about certain preparatory
and advanced schools where people will be brought together to be
trained in "world service". And it was indicated that the
preparatory school in Britain would either be in Wales or Scotland.
I wasn’t sure if Findhorn was really the place mentioned, but it
had all the hallmarks.
In the book, it was suggested that the
preparatory school would be surrounded by water on three sides and a
few miles from the nearest town. That’s exactly where Findhorn was
located – on a peninsular with the purifying elements of wind and
water.
So with this information and the impact of the
slide-show, I resolved that I would return to the farm and finish
the harvest, go to Stockholm to earn some money and then leave for
Scotland. And that’s what happened. I arrived at Findhorn on
Valentine’s Day of 1973. It was a conscious choice because I
thought it was an appropriate gift of love to myself in starting a
new phase. And when I walked through the doors late that evening and
when I sat in the sanctuary and met the community the next morning,
I felt that I had come home. It was an amazing feeling.
Tammie: I
bet.
Michael Lindfield:
All of me felt accepted by the community. People came from varying
backgrounds. Some of them I would probably not have said hi to, or
believed that we had anything in common, if I had accidentally
bumped into them on the street. But what we had in common was a deep
inner link - we were there for the same reason. It felt absolutely
right to be there. I thought at that time that I’d be at Findhorn
maybe a year or two at the most. I ended up staying nearly fourteen
years.
Tammie:
Wow! I had no idea you'd been there so long!
Michael Lindfield:
Yes. And I noticed that there were different cycles within cycles.
Every now and again, I got the sense that it was time to move on,
but invariably something would happen whereby the community seemed
to expand its possibilities and begin exploring further aspects of
itself. The need to move on that I was sensing was, in fact,
something that happened in place - I didn’t actually have to move
somewhere else.
Tammie:
Right.
Michael Lindfield:
So the "in-place" move was a chance to explore more of
myself and more of what Findhorn held as a promise. For fourteen
years Findhorn’s rhythms and my rhythms were in sync. It was like
our biorhythms were pulsing together.
Tammie:
Hmm.
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