Does this mean "going deep" is the same as being different?

________________________________
From: Ravi Yogi <raviy...@att.net>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 2, 2011 2:12:47 AM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Small Pond Syndrome


  
So get out of your Shallow Pond Syndrome.

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Ravi Yogi" <raviyogi@...> wrote:
>
> The amount of fish doesn't translate to Small. It is the depth, very few
> fish venture deep. The millions of small fish at the surface can't
> fathom the depth. You obviously find security, solace and strength in
> numbers.
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > One of the things that seems to happen when one becomes
> > focused on one particular spiritual teacher is that over
> > time the people who do this seem to lose touch with the
> > real world and what *it* would think of that teacher.
> >
> > For example, my bet is that if you walked up to anyone
> > at random on the street in America and asked them who
> > Maharishi Mahesh Yogi was, at this point in time 70%
> > would have no idea. Another 29% would say, "Wasn't he
> > some Indian holy man that the Beatles hung out with
> > for a while?" Maybe -- and this is being generous --
> > 1% would have heard anything about him *other than*
> > his association with the Beatles.
> >
> > Zero percent would reply, "The most important person in
> > my life," or "The bestest, most important spiritual
> > teacher ever to grace the planet Earth," or "An avatar
> > who single-handedly shifted the world from ignorance
> > into an Age of Enlightenment." My bet is that you asked
> > this question of a random sampling of 100,000 people,
> > in any town in America other than, say, Fairfield Iowa,
> > *not a single person* would reply with the answers in
> > this paragraph, or anything even remotely like them.
> >
> > And yet we hear things like this from long-term TMers,
> > who seem to actually think it's "normal."
> >
> > I get the feeling sometimes that many of the frogs who
> > believe this spent far too much time in a very, very
> > small pond, and need to get out more.
> >
>


 

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