Today, October 8, 2021 is the 12th anniversary of the
day that sociopathic New-Wage/McSpirituality guru James Arthur Ray killed two of
his followers -- Kirby Brown and James Shore -- and set in motion
the death, nine days later, of a third follower, Liz Neuman. The
instrument of their deaths was a fake and utterly reckless "sweat lodge"
ceremony in Sedona, Arizona, that also
injured dozens of other participants. The phony sweat lodge was
the "final challenge" at Ray's egregiously overpriced
"Spiritual Warrior" workshop.
Ray, who had skyrocketed to fame following his appearance in the
New-Wage moviemercial The Secret, was
convicted of negligent homicide for the three deaths in Sedona --
and consequently served less than two years in an Arizona state
prison -- but he was never criminally charged in the death
of yet another follower, Colleen Conaway, at a San
Diego Ray event a couple of months before Sedona.
The families and friends of the four people killed by James
Arthur Ray have all learned to cope with their losses in their
own ways. One of the ways that Kirby Brown's family chose was to
found a nonprofit organization, SEEK Safely to help educate the public, hold self-help leaders
accountable, and hopefully avoid more deaths and injuries at the
hands of reckless gurus.
Yet another way they found to come to terms with Kirby's death,
while helping many other people who are dealing with profound
loss and pain, was through the 2020 memoir, This
Sweet Life: How We Lived After Kirby Died, by Kirby's mother Ginny and her baby sister Jean. It is
truly a lovely and haunting book, which I read last year and have
yet to keep my commitment to fully review here -- but never mind
my own negligence; I urge you to read the book.
For Ray, the daze of the four- and five-figure live events such
as Spiritual Warrior would seem to be over, and that's a good
thing. Though he has been struggling mightily to make a comeback
since his release from prison, framing the whole Sedona thing as
a super-major trial and tribulation for him, his
audience has shriveled like the balls of a long-time steroid
user.
For instance, so far he's only earned 2 "likes" for his September 29. 2021 tweet
about yet another "Warrior" workshop -- this one called
"The Way of the Warrior," and set to be delivered via
Zoom over eight weeks, with the co-deliverer being a
drugged-out-looking brunette who calls herself "Bear"
(short for Bersabeh), and who apparently had the appallingly bad
taste to enter into a "committed relationship" with
James. The promo video linked to on that tweet has only gotten
nine views on YouTube so far. So... I'm guessing not much of a
turnout for the "Way of the Warrior" Zoomer.
Even so, as long as he continues to try to claw his way back to
the top of an industry that has more than its share of sociopaths
and predators, and yet continues to attract millions via false
promises and insidious lies, I feel duty-bound to post periodic
reminders of why you should not listen to James Arthur Ray. He is
still spewing his toxins, and the people he killed are still
dead.
Never forget.
Related on this Whirled
- October 2010: Musings on a tragedy and its meanings.
I published this on the one-year anniversary of the infamous "sweat lodge," framing my musings around a review of Connie Joy's Tragedy in Sedona: My Life in James Arthur Ray's Inner Circle. That's another one you need to read. - April 2019: From drawn-and-quartered martyr to "Crisis
Coach": James Arthur Ray's newest desperate gimmick
This is just one of numerous posts about Ray's arrogant yet pathetic attempts to reestablish himself as a selfish-help superstar. In this one we focus on Ray's efforts to brand himself as a "Crisis Coach." - August 2020: Whiny babies of Scamworld
Of the three "whiny babies" I wrote about in this post, James Arthur Ray is the worst, because even after being directly responsible for the deaths of four people at his events, and directly responsible for the physical and emotional injuries of countless others, he continues to paint himself as the real victim.
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