hmmm, I wonder if that group of Seelisburg higher ups included anyone on FFL 
and if he noticed...
Jeez, I can be so point value!





On Monday, January 13, 2014 10:40 AM, TurquoiseB <turquoi...@yahoo.com> wrote:
 
  
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long  wrote:
>
> turq, good point that unisex means women dressing like men. I hadn't thought 
> of that because for me wearing uniforms happened in Catholic schools and they 
> did want the girls to look different from the boys, albeit, like one another. 
> 
> I think part of uniform wearing is to simplify life and help a person have 
> their attention on something other than what to wear to school. Also uniforms 
> are easier on the parents budget.
> 
> I'm fascinated by the topic of uniforms because I wore them to school from 
> age 6 to 18. Then when I went to college, everyone wore blue jeans so that 
> was also a bit of a uniform. To this day, I tend to be nonchalant about 
> clothing, tending to wear what's comfortable.
> 
> I've noticed that people for whom clothing is a medium of expression will 
> find ways to express their individuality even when wearing a uniform.

True that. Back in my TM daze, my "medium of expression" was ties. I mean, you 
can't look all that much different from the other TM Teacher Clones in your TM 
Teacher suit, right? And the "rules" said you had to wear a tie (even to the 
beach...really...I heard Maharishi say this several times), but they didn't 
specify what *kind* of tie. 

Heh heh. I specialized in Tastefully Outrageous Ties. I still have a collection 
of Jerry Garcia ties that are now worth 5-10X what I paid for them on eBay. 
Jerry (whatever else he was into) had great taste as a watercolor artist, and 
so when those designs were transferred to ties, what you got was great taste, 
not psychedelia. I had a number of "museum ties," patterns taken from works of 
art in museum, that I thought were pretty damned tasteful, but which were so 
colorful that many might have considered them...uh...unfashionable. 

My favorite tie to wear during the six months I worked and lived at the TM 
National Headquarters at the end of Sunset Blvd. was a nice pale blue tie with 
a line drawing on it of a female nude. The drawing was lifted from a famous 
artist, but was subtle and (IMO) tasteful, and so I liked wearing the tie for 
aesthetic reasons. 

But the tie was also useful as a Consciousness Test. As I said, the design was 
subtle, so from a distance it probably looked like swirls of black lines on a 
blue background. But get closer, focus on it for half a second, and it was 
obviously a fairly voluptuous female nude. So I'd wear that tie around 
National, all day, and count the number of people who even noticed it. 

Interestingly -- and perhaps revealing of the state of attention of full-time 
TMers -- I could often get through a whole day without anyone noticing. I once 
wore it to a meeting we were having with visitors from Seelisberg, the "higher 
ups" of the European TMO. Jerry Jarvis was there, and all of the US leaders, 
but not a single person noticed the tie. And I don't mean "no one acknowledged 
it." I'd been running this Consciousness Test long enough at this point to know 
the difference. They just didn't care enough or weren't conscious enough to 
notice that one of their number was sitting there wearing a tie with a naked 
babe on it. The memory of that meeting still cracks me up to this day.  :-)



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