---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mjackson74@...> wrote :

 Sounds like he might now be enticing them to get off the True Path of TM and 
TMSP in the Dome.

 

 If that is the case it explains why I haven't heard his name up there before. 
He'll be one of those who cannot be spoken of, shame as he looks quite jolly. 
I'd have a pint with him.
 

 From: salyavin808 <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent: Wednesday, May 13, 2015 3:06 PM
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Hey Sal!
 
 
   

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mjackson74@...> wrote :

 you know this guy?
 

 Nope. Sounds like he's had quite a trip though. Seems he got disillusioned 
with dome life about the same time I did but I don't spend much time around 
Skem , usually just a week a year just to visit old friends, but I shall ask 
about him next time I'm there.
 

 290. Phil Escott https://batgap.com/phil-escott/ Posted on May 4, 2015 
https://batgap.com/phil-escott/ by Rick Archer 
https://batgap.com/author/rickarcher/
 https://batgap.com/phil-escott/#respond
 https://batgap.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Phil-Escott.jpgPhil Escott 
considers himself a spiritual idiot. He says he has made every mistake and 
taken every wrong turn possible… but then again there is no such thing as a 
wrong turn.
 

 Born in 1962 in the south of England, he had many glimpses of the absolute 
even as a young child. The fascination with all things mysterious continued 
through his teens, and he became fascinated with Indian culture and 
spirituality, devouring books such as Yogananda’s Autobiography of a Yogi and 
Muktanada’s Play of Consciousness. In 1979 he started experimenting heavily 
with hallucinogenics, pretending to be Carlos Castaneda. 

 

 Shortly after this he experienced a spectacular awakening, but with no 
guidance or knowledge of what might have happened he resisted it, plunging into 
a couple of years of tremendous fear and suffering.
 

 In 1983 he learned TM, which calmed the unpleasant experiences, and then went 
on to do the TM Sidhi course in 1986, moving to Skelmersdale, the UK’s largest 
TM community, where he faithfully followed the programme for a decade or more, 
searching far too hard for the “prize”. 

 

 By 2000 he had become somewhat disillusioned, and by 2006 his meditation 
practice was sporadic at best. One day, upon deciding to just let go totally of 
TM, in that moment he experienced the same awakening that hit him back in 1979. 
This time though, there was surrender, and it stuck.
 

 However, there was, as is so often the case, far more work to do. By 2010, to 
his astonishment, he found himself crippled with arthritis and other ailments, 
and a long, dark night of the soul followed as he was forced to throw out many 
accumulated dogmas, facing a total reassessment of lifestyle, diet and 
emotional issues, refusing conventional medicine. Upon gradually regaining his 
physical health, he experienced a further awakening in 2013 when using Byron 
Katie’s approach to unlock certain emotional blocks, and the heart opened. 
Since then he has been “back in the marketplace” while the experience deepens 
day by day.
 

 He still lives in Skelmersdale where he helps people to find their way out of 
autoimmune issues through his website at pureactivity.net 
http://pureactivity.net/, has a novel published (An Illusion of Maya), plays 
drums in several bands and enjoys his wonderful family. He is working on a book 
about how he healed himself, which will be called “Arthritis, The Best Thing 
That Ever Happened To Me” focusing on the blessing of illness and how it can be 
a clear pointer to evolving, and perhaps even awakening.
 

 The huge mystery to him now is that he didn’t notice the unity of everything 
and spent his life striving for what was there all along. His dream is to help 
people to notice this elusive but simple and natural miracle for themselves.

 





 


 









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