Bozotronic Barry is here to enlighten us that the goal of self realization is a 
manufactured addiction. He exclaims that he is firmly in control and dammit 
he's going to stay that way, firmly in charge, firmly in control, and firmly 
deluded (oh, and very, very, very special). 

Enjoy yourself Bozo, while the rest of us enjoy the state of complete freedom 
and get on with our lives. I'll be checking wikipedia regularly though for that 
article extolling you alone as have discovered a truth which has eluded all of 
the great teachers and saints throughout history. LOL. :-) 

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb <no_reply@...> wrote:
>
> Having noticed that one of the most classic cult tactics
> has been trotted out lately, I'll comment on it.
> 
> That's where someone who has heavily invested in a goal
> or set of goals sold to them by a cult or religious trad-
> ition reacts to those who challenge the value or worth of
> those goals by trying to suggest that those doing the 
> challenging have somehow "failed" in their own spiritual 
> quest.
> 
> The dynamic and intent of this cult technique is "preach-
> ing to the already converted." It can be synopsized as,
> "Pay no attention to that person who is suggesting that
> the 'goal' you've been trained to pursue as the 'highest'
> goal in life might not be. He or she is only saying that
> because they've 'failed' in pursuing the goal themselves.
> Ignore their suggestions that 'seeking enlightenment' is
> a lot like getting hooked on heroin, and keep shooting up."
> 
> I've suggested several times on this forum that I think
> that the supposed "need" to become enlightened is very
> much a "manufactured need." That is, no one was ever born
> feeling as if they either wanted to or "had to" become
> enlightened. That idea and that "goal" was SOLD to them, 
> in almost every case by someone also SELLING the means 
> to attain it. 
> 
> What I think is going on when this particular "Keep shoot-
> ing up the spiritual heroin" technique is trotted out is
> that people whose entire identity and self worth is based
> on being either a seeker or a "finder" of this manufact-
> ured need are afraid that those who question its value
> and worth might get some people to think about the fact 
> that it *was* sold to them, and they bought it hook, line 
> and sinker (or, more appropriately, baggie, syringe, and 
> needle). Worse, they might start to wonder if it really
> IS the "highest goal" they were told it is.
> 
> So they take the "preaching to the converted" approach,
> trying to appeal to elitism. They stop talking directly
> to the critics or questioners themselves, and focus their
> efforts on the lurkers. They attempt to build (or draw
> upon) a kind of group camaraderie with their fellow 
> spiritual junkies, and urge them to put on a "them vs.
> us" mentality with regard to the critics. The technique
> is to try to appeal to the egos of their fellow junkies
> and tell them how important and how "right" they are
> to devote their lives to pursuing this manufactured need
> that they think they "need." They basically parrot the
> same words of the teachers or salespeople who originally
> sold the goal to them: "*We* know the truth. The highest
> goal is to spend one's life pursuing enlightenment. Every-
> thing else is lesser. Similarly, the highest people on
> the planet are those who believe as we believe and do as
> we do. Everyone else is either ignorant, or worse, for
> those who have analyzed the "need" and found that it 
> wasn't one they felt was worth pursuing, a 'failure.'"
> 
> From my side, I have at no time -- on this forum or on
> any other -- attempted to convince anyone not to follow
> a traditional spiritual path. If you want to spend your
> life shooting up spiritual heroin, that's just FINE with
> me. It's just that I've kicked the habit myself, and am
> sharing some of the thoughts and realizations that 
> allowed me to do that and find what, to me, is a better 
> goal. (That is, living each day as if Now were the most
> important thing, not some nebulous "enlightened" future,
> and trying to enjoy more and more of what the world
> presents to me, while helping as many people as I can
> along the Way.)
> 
> I choose this particular path in life *having experienced*
> the goal that was once sold to me. I have spent days,
> weeks, and sometimes months in subjective states of 
> consciousness that seem to map strongly to Maharishi's
> CC, GC, and UC. 
> 
> My response to that subjective experience is Big Whoop.
> 
> Neat enough at the time, but *none* of these states were
> in any real or objective sense any "better" or "higher"
> than any other state of attention. I am content these
> days (most of the time) with just allowing whatever state 
> of attention happens to flit across my being to do, without 
> seeking another. At other times, if I feel like it, I can
> use techniques I have learned to "re-access" these CC,
> GC, or UC states, if doing so feels like fun. I "put them
> on" for a while, enjoy them, and then allow them to fade
> and enjoy the next state of attention. I see no need to
> "seek" anything more than this.
> 
> If others do, I say that they should go for it. If they
> are sincere in their own personal quest, and manage to
> express it on this forum *without consistently putting
> down or attempting to perform character assassination on
> those who believe otherwise*, I have nothing to say to
> them, either positive or negative. If they DO feel the
> need to constantly present their path in life as "higher"
> than other people's, and those other people as "lower"
> than themselves (think both Nabby and Jim), I might say
> something from time to time about THEM and their arrogant,
> pompous elitism. What I say is not intended to put down 
> the entire spiritual path, just their sad expression of it.
> 
> If you're a lurker out there, and trying to make sense 
> of the conflicting opinions presented on this forum, I 
> can suggest a technique for doing so. When someone reacts
> to another poster who has challenged the manufactured
> goal of enlightenment by pointing out that it is, in fact,
> manufactured, and the cultist challenged by this pulls the 
> Cult 101 Don't Let These Naysayers Stop You From Shooting 
> Up The Spiritual Heroin routine, ask yourself one question.
> 
> "Which of these guys is trying to SELL me something? Which
> is trying to get me to do something that costs me money 
> or time or both to 'achieve' something, and which is just
> stating a personal opinion, while SELLING nothing? If you
> do this, I think you'll find that those who are trying to
> get you to "stay the course" and "stay on the spiritual
> path" sound a lot more like schoolyard drug pushers than
> the critics do. All we're doing is presenting ideas.
>


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