> One wonders, if they're sidhas, why they aren't focusing their > attention instead on their practice?
It all boils down to a divorcee dating club. It also gives married people a shot at "trading up." --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Vaj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On Sep 7, 2008, at 10:52 PM, sparaig wrote: > > >> Or maybe you are overweight and you develop a plan and follow it > >> through and lose weight and your health improves as a result (among > >> other things). That would be a pretty good validation of desire > >> manifestation. > >> > > > > Again, why call it "desire manifestation technology?" That's a > > buzzword > > designed to appeal to people who like those buzzwrods, and anyone with > > any intelligence who was still practicing the TM Sidhis would see > > it as pure > > manipulation, even if the person doing the manipulation is not > > being honest > > with themselves about why they are using the term. > > > I think you might be surprised at how many people would go for this > type of scheme. I can't tell you how many FF friends I've had who got > sucked in to money-making schemes disguised as spirituality. There's > apparently a real big draw for this type of thing. > > One wonders, if they're sidhas, why they aren't focusing their > attention instead on their practice? >