RE post 416341
 

 It's just a knee jerk reaction, nothing to worry about. I said exactly the 
same thing only with the addition of a few qualifying statements. I'm sure that 
if anyone from MUM joined up for a chat we'd all be interested to hear what 
they have to say, just because we rant occasionally amongst ourselves doesn't 
mean we're a bunch of animals. When Fred Travis joined in with TM-Free he got a 
very respectful welcome and some serious questions all of which he attempted to 
answer - he even agreed with me that the TMO shouldn't try to make money out of 
products - yagya, MVVT etc - that it hasn't scientifically verified!
 

 I'd rather you got Nader or Hagelin though, I'll line up some proper 
physicists and we'll have a grand old time.
 

 Just out of interest though, what do you think the term "spiritual" actually 
means?
 

 It comes from the Latin Spiritus Animus or that which animates us. The idea 
being that there is some spark or soul within us that gives us life. It's a 
term that seems to have morphed somewhat in recent years though with the 
co-opting and mingling of scientific principles with eastern thought whether 
it's justified or not. Discussions about whether such an entity exists, how it 
might work and what it might do are what interest me most, and whether 
Spiritual is a "mere" religious system nowadays rather than the all 
encompassing Theory of Everything that it claims to be.
 

 Anyway, it's lucky that Rick just put FFL in that category because it seems to 
fit with the TM belief system 
 and that he wasn't seriously expecting us to limit our conversation to matters 
of the new age and nothing else.
 

 From the FFL home page:
 

 "Pretty much any topic is fair game.
 

 "What is wanted is not the will to believe, but the wish to find out, which is 
the exact opposite." ~ Bertrand Russell "
 

 I mention all this Doug, because you have a history of accepting and promoting 
the dogmatic insistence of the TMO that certain of it's beliefs are in fact 
facts and I don't want alternative viewpoints moderated on partisan grounds.
 

 Things should stand or fall on the strength of evidence not devotion.
 

 "The healthy mind challenges its own assumptions." ~ The I Ching

 

 

 

 

 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote :

 MJ, FFL being categorized with Yahoo-groups as a spiritual group one would 
hope that people could come in here and express their own spiritual experience 
without the harassing suppression of threats being made against them. 
  You seem to have some parochial way in threatening people here by 'slap'. 
Would pushing the 'moderate' button over your membership status here better 
provide safe space for spiritual people to come forward on FFL with their 
experiences? For instance I should think it valuable to also have Robert 
Schneider or someone from his office come on here and express their feelings in 
conversation here, without threat of abuse. Threat exampled within FFL post 
#416341 as what evidently was a slurring rant and an invasion of someone's 
privacy, using FFL as a vehicle.   
 

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

 And let's face it, if I came on like gangbusters here and touted my spiritual 
experiences, the mob would tear my descriptions asunder.....as has been done to 
every single person who has come here to report suchlike.
 

 I am only aware of Brother Jim aka Dr. Dumbass - who else claimed spiritual 
awareness/awakening/enlightenment and received a stout thrashing as a result?

 

 From: Duveyoung <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent: Tuesday, June 9, 2015 4:21 PM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Fancy that!
 
 
   

 I'm thinking over here that having had an "experience" does not validate "as 
necessarily true" the thoughts that arise afterwards.  We see most folks here 
thinking otherwise -- that is: they think that their thoughts MUST be resonant 
with the ultimate reality of their recent experience.  

To have seen someone levitate doesn't make one's subsequent thoughts about 
levitation necessarily true.  Even the person who levitates can be expected to 
have but a mere abstraction for an explanation that is open to every sort of 
nay-saying.

Relativity being such a dynamic, if one knows this, hypocrisy of a deeper 
degree is needed to validate one's thoughts and yet invalidate the subsequent 
thoughts of others -- others that had differing experiences.

Nabby is a very very sincere poster, for instance, yet we found him being 
bonked by those who claim to not personally have such blinkeredness when it is 
obvious to all that everyone is blinkered in some IMPORTANT and PROFOUND manner.

Stone, glass house and all that.  No one gets to toss the first stone.  Or the 
second.

I would expect that someone who found fault in others for being a true believer 
and "running with it," would be especially careful to underline ones obvious 
conflict of interests.  

As for me being inside my head and not having had experiences.  Harrumph.  
While this assertion is not couched in the normal cruel-troll manner of 
FFL-past, it does seem to accuse me of being spiritually bereft of the basic 
information needed to be clear about spirituality.  Only I could know if that's 
true -- to assert it as true is to do a one-upman-ship deal.   I claim that 
this kind of insinuation is AGAINST THE GUIDELINES.

And let's face it, if I came on like gangbusters here and touted my spiritual 
experiences, the mob would tear my descriptions asunder.....as has been done to 
every single person who has come here to report suchlike.

This is the place where prophets come to not be honored....heh heh.

And, by the way, I have had and continue to have some very profound moments 
when all my abstractions align -- with a wonderful congruence -- with my heart 
and thought stream.  Moment by moment, if I wish to do so, I can suss out from 
my flow of consciousness  perfect examples of the concepts I hold dear.  
Doesn't make me correct, but I sure do have experiences.   I'll walk this back: 
 everyone has great experiences -- even if they've never personally noted such. 
 

Given the human karma of the ego daily dying-into-sleep, being reborn in 
dreams, and then coming back to life in the morning, what isn't magical?  To 
diss others for not describing it "well" or "logically" or "intuitively 
acceptably,"  is at least juvenile and probably an act of aggression.....and 
AGAINST THE GUIDELINES.




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

 Edg, because you're so...uh...edgy and all, I suspect you'll take my quickie 
response below as if it was intended as some kind of affront, and it really 
wasn't. I was just taking advantage of these "revalidated FFL guidelines" vibes 
to just be honest. 

 

 To expand on this a bit, to be honest I've always gotten the impression from 
your writing that your approach to most spiritual topics is intellectual, as 
opposed to experiential. When you get into how much you know about Advaita, for 
example, my impression is that this is stuff that you "know" -- intellectually 
-- about Advaita, but without ever having experienced the states of 
consciousness that are being written about. Correct me if I'm wrong about this. 

 

 I say this not to take a dig at you but to point out a possible distinction 
between the two of us. I haven't just read about and thought about the basic 
principle of Tantra -- the peaceful co-existence of complete opposites -- I've 
*lived* it. I've spent fourteen years with Rama -- and all the time since -- 
living it. 
 

 Please try to remember who you're talking to here. 

 

 I write science articles for a living. I have a strong feel for what science 
considers "real" in this world and what it does not. 

 

 At the same time, *I cannot deny my own experience*. 

 

 While knowing all of this about science, I have personally witnessed many of 
the siddhis you have only read about. I have sat in the desert -- or in a 
Dennys along a California highway -- and watched someone just gently lift up 
off the ground (or the naugahyde Dennys benches) and float in the air for a 
while. 

 

 The morning after experiencing something like that, if you are a bit of a 
cynical scientist like myself, you tend to wake up thinking, "OK, what the fuck 
was that?"
 

 I still don't know. 

 

 All I know is that I experienced it, in states of mind that were as high and 
clear as I have ever experienced in this incarnation, and that were completely 
free from the effects of any kinds of drugs, and that for me it all really 
fuckin' happened. 

 

 I am NOT saying that I know exactly *what* happened. What I'm saying is that 
*something* fairly extraordinary happened, and that until someone proves to me 
exactly what it was, I'm going to go easy on myself for not getting all anal 
about what is "real" and what isn't.
 

 That "real" enough for you, dude?   :-)
 


 From: "TurquoiseBee turquoiseb@... [FairfieldLife]" 
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
 To: "FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> 
 Sent: Tuesday, June 9, 2015 8:53 PM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Fancy that!
 
 
   
 I have *absolutely no problem* with such seeming contradictions. 

 

 If you do, I would suggest that they just might be *your* problems.  :-)

 

 


 From: Duveyoung <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent: Tuesday, June 9, 2015 8:49 PM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Fancy that!
 
 
   

 Barry -- you are on record here being quite against most "magical thinking," 
but here we find you being quite the believer.  "That explained quite a few of 
my dreams during the period I lived there.  :-)"  Would this be hypocrisy or 
you just playing loose with "what's real?"  I ask this in the fullest sincerity 
to honor the recently re-validated FFL guidelines.



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

 


 Excellent. 

 

 A few years ago, before we actually moved from Spain to the Netherlands, my 
odd extended family and I spent a month living in Amsterdam in a house we'd 
rented there. It was a really cool house, with multiple floors and a grand 
piano and a great kitchen, but at the same time there was always something 
"off" about it. So I asked around the neighborhood and found that it had in 
previous centuries been an asylum for crazy women. That explained quite a few 
of my dreams during the period I lived there.  :-)

 

 From: salyavin808 <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent: Tuesday, June 9, 2015 8:02 PM
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Fancy that!
 
 
   
 In the late '90's the TMO acquired a mansion in a highly sought after part of 
London. Namely Kensington palace gardens. It was a fabulous house, right 
opposite Kensington palace. Huge place with double iron gates and a massive 
ballroom.
 

 It faced east too. The heads of the movement all lived there and all said how 
amazing the perfect vastu felt. I lived there too for a while, just helping out 
the media department. Great place to stay as the big knobs sure knew how to 
live, bespoke silk carpets and the best food eaten off mahogany tables.
 

 The idea was that they'd use it to wine and dine the rich and famous thus 
spreading TM to the top of society, as was Marshy's wish at the time. "The rich 
won't eat in a poor house" he said, they sure didn't here! Not that all that 
many came. Hardly any in fact, but the intention was a good one if you approve 
of that sort of elitism. I didn't but staying there made a nice change from our 
draughty, cold and empty mansion in the Bedfordshire countryside.
 

 But as I was finishing my book on The Great Escape I was reminded that the 
house had a rather more chequered history than expected. It was owned and used 
by MI6 to interrogate captured Nazi officers during and after WW2. Including 
the masterminds of the massacre that wiped out 50 allied airmen in 1944.
 

 Fancy that, I might have slept in a room that was once occupied by a terrified 
Gestapo murderer who sat awake all night dreading his fate at the hands of a 
war crimes tribunal. I wonder if they appreciated the vastu at all?
 

 


 













  

 


 











 


 












 


 











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