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It Takes Many Hands - Behind the Scenes of Finding Home with Deborah Games
With Deborah Games

You might be surprised to learn just how many pairs of hands have helped out in the creation of Finding Home. In addition to the tremendous commitment of Hillary and Gangaji to telling this story, and the hours of recording and editing that it has taken, it has also needed the help of key volunteers and staff to make it happen.

In the first of a series of reports, learn how volunteers took a crash course in music licensing to bring us the evocative soundtrack that haunts the early episodes.

Gangaji and Hillary were determined to use the real music of the era, Elvis Presley, Taj Mahal, Joni Mitchell, and others that formed the backdrop to Gangaji’s early life. Here is a link to a Spotify playlist for Episode 3 that was created by another member of the team, Tushar Montano.

We are so grateful to Deborah Games (pictured here with Mary G at an Esalen Retreat in 2008), who took a deep dive into the complexities of music licensing to make this possible. Here is how she described the experience, and what was evoked by listening to Finding Home:

 

If you had to describe to someone why working on this particular project mattered to you personally, what would you say?

It was such an honor and joy to volunteer for the Gangaji Foundation. Having listened to a few episodes of Finding Home, I was profoundly touched and inspired. It helped me to reflect on my epiphanies and what I was seeking. I was highly motivated to obtain the music licenses because it was required to release the series, and I was thrilled for the sangha to hear it!

Obtaining the music licenses felt like an adventure in not knowing, perseverance, and being myself.  There was so much support, seen and unseen; Attorney Andrea Grill’s expertise was vital.  It was fun and exhilarating to be used as part of that flow.

 

What moment or episode of Finding Home has impacted you the most so far?

The moment of Finding Home that most impacted me was in Episode One. After Gangaji talked about her early years at the Preventorium, a forgotten childhood memory surfaced for me - one of suffering. After seeing it, I saw through it, and sobbed tears of relief in recognizing it wasn’t true. An old hungry ghost was freed. Each episode had gifts for me, but this one was the most healing.

 

Did any of Gangaji’s epiphanies and realizations spark any of your own while working on this project?

When Gangaji left her first marriage because she felt the limits of it, it paralleled when I left a career in my late twenties. Following college, I worked as a financial analyst after receiving a degree in finance. My roommate introduced me to a nearby Rudolph Steiner community and Waldorf Teacher School. I took a class in spiritual science, where they talked about Christ Consciousness and the value of being present. I was intensely fascinated - this was what I had wanted to know. I enrolled in the evening program of the orientation year to become a Waldorf teacher. After a year, I recognized I wanted a Waldorf education more than I wanted to be a Waldorf teacher.

One night while dancing at a drumming circle, I saw a talented dancer, and when I asked if she taught dance, I learned she taught yoga. I attended her Iyengar yoga classes, and found I slept better afterwards and felt less stressed. Yoga opened my body and mind in a way I had never experienced. Eventually, my body became more flexible, and I felt deeper relaxation at the end of class. I attended her yoga teacher training, as I wanted to share yoga with others. She was also a massage therapist and introduced me to massage, which helped me to let go physically and release emotionally. I found that I wanted to live my life and help people more than I wanted a secure job. After a couple of years of doing yoga and seeing a Gangaji video, I left a job in finance to become a yoga teacher, attend massage school, and become a massage therapist. It felt so good to do work that was helping people to relax! What a joy!”

 

 

“This is your resting place, your watering hole. Find what supports you, what includes you, and drink it in. Be nourished. Be enlivened. And when you feel thirsty again, drink some more.” —Gangaji

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