Did anyone else notice that in this single post Mark said more positive
things about Maharishi than tedadams and danfriedman have  said
in all of the posts they've made to Fairfield Life combined?


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Mark Landau <m@...> wrote:
>
> Wow, are we one dimensional?  I believe it's the sign of a developed
being that he or she can easily hold all the paradoxes.  Not only can I
have it both ways, but I must have it both ways and, beyond that, have
it all ways that were, are or ever will be, if I am to do any justice to
truth and reality.  That's a lot of ways.  I also believe that,
ultimately, we must go beyond all the paradoxes and polarities,
including the polarity of good and bad (and that, of course, doesn't
mean that we rush out to do all the "bad" things we possibly can ASAP).
>
> The truth of the matter, if anyone cares, is that, like Judith Bourke,
who I find to be a wonderful, honest person, I was in love with him (no,
prurient ones, not that way, though there are things I could say about
that, too) and the notion and seeming experience that TM could transform
the world for the better.  Why else would I work seven days a week for
the movement for nearly five years and pay significantly to do so?  Are
we not all some blend of the three gunas?  Aren't there glorious and
dark things about all of us?
>
> M was no different.  One of the most glorious things about him was his
energy.  I lived and basked in it pretty much straight for the seven
months I was skin boy and for a lot of the five years I was with him.  I
went through withdrawal for two years when I lost it.
>
> That's my voice in the background of DWTF when David cut to the
archival footage of M entering the hall with Jerry carrying the skin
saying something like, "It was like divine air came down from heaven and
I got addicted to it."  Is that so very negative?
>
> In one other sentence I said something like, "Remember how I said he
could get into you and help you sleep?  He could also get into you and
completely pulverize you."  Is that both "negative" and "positive"?  Of
course, one-dimensional believers would say having M pulverize you would
be the greatest blessing.  It could only be all positive.  But what if
he did it because he was pissed, out of sorts or sexually frustrated? 
Yes, IME, he definitely got sexually frustrated.  In my total reworking
of his own words, the only man in all of recored history that anyone
knew about who lived beyond the libido was Sukadeva.
>
> I also said in the movie, "It took me a while to put the paradox
together.  How could he be wonderful and awful at the same time?  Well,
that's just how it was.  He was wonderful and awful at the same time." 
David filmed me for over two hours and he used the several minutes that
suited his purpose in segueing from the more positive part of the film
to the more negative.
>
> So I feel no conflict or contradiction in saying "In my experience,
they still carry a lot of his energy, as if the atoms and molecules have
been entrained in it. And, of course, in India, they would be holy
objects to be revered. I have kept them very well protected and have
handled them very little over the decades."  and
>
> M abused women, devastated people right and left and was more
concerned with money than with treating people decently.
>
> They're all simply true.  And so were all the other totally glorious
aspects of that intense, complex man.
>
> Was anyone else in the movie theater that night in Fiuggi, or wherever
it was, when M's darshan got so strong that it made all the little,
hanging crystals dance extravagantly and tinkle together as if there
were a small tornado blowing through the hall?  And probably only I saw
this, but when M first got to Murren, the three mountain devas came to
greet him.  IME, which of course many of you would completely howl at,
they had been waiting for someone for centuries and thought, because of
his light, that it might be M.  M went completely silent and looked up
at them for several moments while they communed.  He wasn't who they
were waiting for, they left and the lecture went on.  And you should
have seen the angel stations that congregated in the intersections of
the pathways between the puja tables in the halls where M made teachers.
That's why he didn't like people walking around then.  I had to bust
right through one of them to get to him to tell him something urgent
while he was giving out the mantras.  The five or six angels in that one
station took off in all directions like they had been stung.  (There,
three little stories...)
>
> For me, the truth holds a higher priority than rules about the truth
or any rules that are more about control than the highest good.  Perhaps
I am wrong about that.  Do my circumstances prove that, one way or
another?  I think not.  In the actual words of the man himself, "Karma
is unfathomable."  I do love some of his sound bites.  Another one that
would be appropriate here is "There are no absolutes in the relative."
>
> You're only confused because you're thinking one-dimensionally.  When
you move beyond that, try watching my interview in the film again.  You
may, or may not, see it slightly differently.
>
> Thank you for eliciting this,
>
> m
>
> On Jul 20, 2011, at 7:28 AM, tedadams108 wrote:
>
> >
> > I'm a little confused. Is this the same Mark Landau who spoke such
unkind words about Maharishi in the film "David Wants To Fly."? When
attempting to sell Maharishi's sandals there are no unkind words spoken,
only glorifying words, probably as an attempt to increase the
marketability of the sandals.
> > I have compassion for Mark that he is having financial
> > challenges in this economy, like so many others. Apparently his
> > involvement with Maharishi did not result in financial well being
> > as it did for so many others (John Gray, Barbara DeAngeles, Deepak
Chopra, etc., and the many wealthy meditators living in Fairfield and
around the world. Maybe it's more difficult to get Nature Support when
one cavils about the Master. I'm sure someone would
> > appreciate having the sandals and would be willing to pay something
> > for them. My guess is that the only value to Mark would be for
firewood.
> >
> >
>


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