Non-meditation

It seems to me that many non-meditators have forgotten—or never knew—what it is 
like to suffer an unhappy collision with scientific rationality. We are open to 
good evidence and sound argument as a matter of principle, and are generally 
willing to follow wherever they may lead. Certain of us have made careers out 
of bemoaning the failure of people to adopt this same attitude. 

However, I recently stumbled upon an example of secular intransigence that may 
give readers a sense of how spiritual people feel when their methods as 
technologies are criticized. As you will see but for the rigorous research 
conducted it suggests that it is worth thinking
about. We can call the phenomenon of non-meditation "the delusion". 

The unhappy truth about non-meditation has been scientifically established to a 
moral certainty: That non-meditation is bad for you. It is bad for your 
children. It is bad for your neighbors and their children. Non-meditation is 
also completely unnecessary, because in the developed world we suppose we 
invariably have better and more effective alternatives for meditation even in 
our homes. If you
are a non-meditator in the United States, Europe, Australia, or any other 
developed nation, you are most likely doing so recreationally—and the 
persistence of this habit is a major source of anti-spiritual pollution in 
cities throughout the world.


 In fact, non-meditation often contributes more harmful parameters of 
negativity particulates to the urban air than any other source.
Certainly a human life is a terrible potential to waste in non-meditation. 

-Buck in FF


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