I remember after I got the flying sutra, and had six months left to work for 
the Movement. Out near Waverly, MO, building the A of E Capital building, and 
growing apples and strawberries. The ag crew would all be hopping around  on 
the foam, and I am not making this up, we attracted a little brown and white 
bunny rabbit, who would come into our converted garage during program, and 
watch us.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

 Desperate for attention and revenue, the TMO pays yet another TM shill at the 
Huffington Post to trumpet the praises of grinning Bobby Roth and by extension 
sing the praises of the TM Movement and its core practice. 
 
 In other news, a mouse ran across the toes of several TMSP'ers in the Ladies 
Dome during program - the shrieking and hopping about was mistakenly considered 
to be excellent effects of Patanjali's Golden Sutras. Even though the real 
cause of the commotion was eventually revealed, film and photos of the event 
are already being used to promote belief in yogic flying success. 
 --------------------------------------------
 On Tue, 10/15/13, Dick Mays <dickmays@... mailto:dickmays@...> wrote:
 
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] TM helps poor children, veterans with PTSD, and 
victims of domestic violence
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Tuesday, October 15, 2013, 12:01 PM
 
 This
 is an excellent article!Dick
 
http://theuncarvedblog.com/2013/10/14/renowned-tm-meditation-teacher-bob-roth-featured-on-the-third-metric-and-huffpost-live/The
 
http://theuncarvedblog.com/2013/10/14/renowned-tm-meditation-teacher-bob-roth-featured-on-the-third-metric-and-huffpost-live/The
 Uncarved
 BlogKen Chawkin's articles & poems:
 Transcendental Meditation, consciousness &
 enlightenment« How TM
 helped calm and center a young woman’s busy
 mind—inspiring article in new
 Irish magazineRenowned
 (TM) meditation teacher Bob Roth featured on The Third
 Metric and HuffPost LiveHuffington Post Senior
 Writer Ann
 Brenoff profiled Bob Roth, Executive
 Director of the David Lynch
 Foundation, an exemplary representative
 for The Third
 Metric: Redefining Success Beyond Money
 and Power.huff.to/1albfF9 (10/14/2013)Meditation Teacher To The Stars:
 His clients include Oprah, Russell Brand, Martin Scorcese
 and Dr. Oz, but renowned meditation teacher Bob Roth also
 serves low-income and under-served communities by sharing
 his passion: Transcendental
 Meditation.Bob Roth was
 also interviewed on @HuffPostLive: Stress Is The
 New Black Plague: Meditation guru Bob Roth
 ‏@meditationbob joins
 host Nancy Redd
 ‏@nancyredd to explain the
 benefits of meditation: Bob Roth Talks Transcendental
 Meditation @TMmeditation. Watch this
 lively interview http://huff.lv/GZQpn9 ( http://huff.lv/GZQpn9 (12:46).Bob
 Roth: Bringing Calm To The Center Of Life’s
 StormIf
 there was a perfect year in which to discover Transcendental
 Meditation, it might just have been 1968. That was the year
 that Bob Roth was a freshman at UC Berkeley — a campus
 considered Ground Zero for the anti-war movement and the
 cultural changes sweeping through the country at the time.
 He remembers living surrounded by helicopters spewing tear
 gas over student war protesters and Army tanks parked
 outside his front door. Demonstrations. Riots.
 Chaos.And against
 this backdrop, Roth did what many college students do: He
 took a part-time job. He sold scoops of ice cream at
 Swenson’s ice cream parlor, never expecting that amid the
 rush of pending social changes engulfing him, it would be at
 the ice cream shop where he would meet a guy who would
 ultimately alter the course of his life forever.The college crew at Swenson’s
 was the usual motley collection of hippies, straights and
 everything in between, recalls Roth. But one guy stood out:
 Peter Stevens. “He was like a quiet reflection pool amid
 the chaos,” recalls Roth, “and I was drawn to
 him.”“Peter was
 centered, energetic, super-smart, kind to all, easy-going,
 never agitated, with an ineffable calm about him,” Roth
 told The Huffington Post. He learned that Peter
 “meditated,” something that Roth said was a bit of a
 disconnect for him. “Meditation was not in my
 vocabulary.” But he was intrigued and curious, and went
 with Stevens to a class in Transcendental Meditation, a
 meditative practice derived from the ancient Vedic tradition
 in India. After just one class, Roth was hooked.Today, Roth is the executive
 director of the David Lynch
 Foundation, where he has helped bring
 Transcendental Meditation programs to more than 300,000
 at-risk kids in 35 countries, as well as veterans suffering
 from post-traumatic stress disorder, and women and girls who
 are survivors of domestic violence. He’s also the national
 director of the Center for Leadership Performance, which
 introduces the TM program to business, industry and
 government organizations — and even some United Nations
 groups.Today, Roth’s
 student roster includes a lot of very recognizable
 names: Oprah, Russell Simmons,
 Russell Brand, Martin Scorsese, Mehmet Oz, Hugh Jackman and
 dozens of others. He’d be embarrassed to be called
 “meditation teacher to the stars,” but such a
 description wouldn’t be far off. For the past 40 years, he
 has meditated twice a day no matter where he is, in places
 as discombobulating as an airplane when need be.He explains Transcendental
 Meditation with the following analogy: The surface of the
 ocean is waves and white caps. But deeper down, the ocean is
 still. How TM differs from other meditations, he says, is
 that it doesn’t attempt to still the waves, but rather
 allow access to the stillness. By practicing it twice a day
 for 20 minutes, he said, studies have shown that people
 sleep better, reduce their stress, and lower their blood
 pressure. In children, the practice can reduce ADHD
 symptoms and symptoms of other
 learning disorders.Not all
 Roth’s clients are rich and famous. One of the key focuses
 of the David Lynch Foundation is to target those who
 aren’t and improve their lives through TM. There’s a
 story that Roth likes to tell about theDLF’s Quiet Time
 program — where thousands of
 at-risk children are taught TM in school. It involves a
 little girl he called Jessica (not her real name) who lives
 in a crime-infested neighborhood of San Francisco. Jessica
 showed up one day at school wearing a white dress splattered
 with what her teacher, at first glance, thought was red
 paint. It was blood — blood from Jessica’s uncle who had
 been shot that morning in a random drive-by while waiting
 with her at the bus stop.Instead of running home, Jessica
 ran to school so that she could meditate, she told her
 teachers. The DLF Quiet Time program had been in her school
 for about a year at the time and for her, it made school a
 safe place whereas her home often couldn’t be. “For
 me,” said Roth, “that says it all.”As part of the Quiet Time Program,
 the foundation supplies teachers for each child to have
 one-on-one meditation instruction and follow-up. “In a
 school with 1,000 students,” he said, “we bring in 20
 teachers.”The results
 have been gratifying, said Roth, who believes that results
 must be quantifiable to matter. “Change needs to show up
 in grades, reduced number of suspensions and dropout
 rates,” he said. And the Quiet Time program has done all
 that. The San Francisco Unified School District
 reports an 86 percent reduction in
 suspensions over two years in
 schools where the program has been
 introduced; a 65 percent decrease in violent conflict at the
 John O’Connell High School; and the Journal of Psychiatry
 shows reduced ADHD symptoms and symptoms of other learning
 disorders among students who practice TM.Carlos Garcia, retired
 superintendent of the San Francisco Unified School District,
 heralded the program as one which is “transforming
 lives.” He said, “It is transforming schools and
 neighborhoods, and it will transform our society.”All of which is music to 
Roth’s
 ears. TM is a life-changer for individuals, he said, but
 also a game changer in the broader sense. It may start with
 an individual’s desire to sleep better or reduce stress,
 but results are similar to what happens when you pull on one
 leg of the table, said Roth. “The whole table moves.”
 And what moves in this case are blood pressure numbers,
 heart attack risk factors, and the overall ability to make
 better decisions with a more focused mind. “You are
 thinking more clearly, are able to make decisions more
 ethically, perform more creatively.” It’s like when you
 water a plant because some leaves are wilting, he said, but
 the whole plant benefits from the water. And it spills over
 into those around you in a chain reaction.Companies interested in innovation
 are drawn to TM because of the positive impact it has on
 their work force. It’s why Oprah had Roth bring his
 program to her staff of 400. “It’s not just about
 learning to relax,” said Roth. “TM wakes up the brain
 and the executive functions. It resets the brain to perform
 in a less ‘flight or fight’ manner.”And yes, it reduces stress.
 Whether he is teaching a homeless guy — the DLF has a
 program that works with New York City homeless — or a
 billionaire, “they both suffer from stress,” said
 Roth.But as one celebrity
 who shall remain unnamed quipped when Roth asked her why she
 wanted to learn to meditate, “I want to maintain a
 permanent connection with the intelligence of the universe.
 I also can’t sleep.”TM
 training allows people to access an ability they already are
 hard wired for: to take a profound rest at will.Roth says the tipping point has
 been reached in regard to the public’s understanding of
 the value of meditation. As he wrote on Maria
 Shriver’s blog, “It feels like
 something foundational can be done to help transform lives
 through meditation, not only among those most at-risk to
 suffer traumas in life, but also the teen in the private
 school who battles the very real demons of substance abuse
 and unspoken thoughts of suicide; the parent who is
 struggling to survive an ugly divorce and still keep the
 family intact; or just the person — man, woman, boy, girl
 — who is navigating life’s daily vicissitudes and
 can’t seem to catch a breath, turn off the noise, get a
 good night’s sleep.”Ann
 Brenoff can be reached at: ann.brenoff@... mailto:ann.brenoff@.... 

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