04/07/2026
April 6 marks the birth of Ram Dass (born Richard Alpert, 1931–2019), one of the most influential spiritual teachers of the twentieth century and a key figure in the transmission of Eastern contemplative traditions to the West.
He was born in Boston, into a well-established American family, and educated at institutions including Tufts, Wesleyan, and ultimately Harvard University, where he later taught psychology. In the early 1960s, alongside colleague Timothy Leary, Alpert became involved in pioneering research into psychedelics, particularly L*D, as a means of exploring consciousness.
While these experiences revealed profound alterations in perception and identity, Alpert came to recognize their limitations. The insights they offered were temporary; they did not provide a stable or enduring transformation of being. This realization led him to seek a more sustained path.
In 1967, he traveled to India, where he met Neem Karoli Baba, a meeting that would decisively shape his life. Under his teacher’s guidance, Alpert was given the name Ram Dass, meaning “servant of God,” and began a disciplined path of spiritual practice rooted in devotion, meditation, and self-inquiry.
His 1971 book, Be Here Now, became a seminal work in American spiritual literature. It articulated, in accessible language, the possibility that awakening is not separate from ordinary life, but available within it—through attention, presence, and the gradual softening of self-centered identity.
Ram Dass’s contribution extended beyond writing and teaching. He was a co-founder of the Seva Foundation, an organization dedicated to alleviating suffering through service, particularly by supporting sight-restoring medical care in underserved regions. He also helped establish the Love Serve Remember Foundation, which continues to preserve and share his teachings. The foundation’s name reflects a concise expression of his path: to love others, to serve selflessly, and to remember one’s deeper nature.
Throughout his life, Ram Dass emphasized the integration of insight into relationship. His often-quoted remark—“If you think you’re enlightened, go spend time with your family”—points to a central theme in his teaching: realization is not measured in isolation, but in how one meets the ordinary conditions of life.
He also offered a corrective to idealized notions of spiritual experience, observing that what one seeks as “God” or truth often appears in unexpected and challenging forms—what he described, at times, as “God in drag.” In this way, he redirected attention away from abstraction and toward the immediacy of lived experience.
In 1997, a stroke left him partially paralyzed, an event he later described as a continuation of his practice. Rather than diminishing his teaching, this period deepened its emphasis on acceptance, humility, and presence.
Ram Dass’s enduring legacy lies not in the establishment of a system or doctrine, but in the articulation of a path that integrates contemplative insight with everyday life. His teaching remains grounded in a simple but demanding invitation:
to be here now.